Braze (NASDAQ:BRZE) released first-quarter financial results and hosted an earnings call on Wednesday. Read the complete transcript below.
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The full earnings call is available at https://braze-fiscal-first-quarter-2027-results.open-exchange.net/
Summary
Braze Inc reported a strong fiscal first quarter 2027 with $211 million in revenue, marking a 30% year-over-year increase and a 3% rise from the previous quarter.
The company achieved a record free cash flow of $27 million and improved its non-GAAP operating margin by over 300 basis points year-over-year.
Braze Inc raised its revenue guidance for the second quarter and the full fiscal year, with expectations of 22% year-over-year growth.
The company reported strong customer growth, with net customer additions increasing by 104 sequentially and large customer accounts growing by 33% year-over-year.
Strategic initiatives include the expansion of Braze AI technologies, particularly the Decisioning Studio, AI Operator, and AI Agent Console, which are seeing strong early adoption.
Management highlighted the importance of first-party data and AI in driving competitive advantage and customer engagement, positioning Braze Inc as a leader in the AI-driven customer engagement space.
Isabel Winkles, the CFO, announced her departure, and the company is actively searching for a new CFO.
Full Transcript
OPERATOR
Welcome to the Braze Inc fiscal first quarter 2027 earnings conference call. My name is Ryan and I’ll be your operator for today’s call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. After the Speaker’s presentation, we will conduct a question and answer session. I will now turn the call over to Christopher Farris, Vice President of Braze Investor Relations.
Christopher Farris (Vice President of Investor Relations)
Thank you Operator. Good afternoon and thank you for joining us today. To review Braze’s results for the fiscal first quarter 2027, I’m joined by our co Founder and Chief Executive Officer Bill Magnuson and our Chief Financial Officer Isabel Winkles. We announced our results in a press release issued after the market closed today. Please refer to the Investor Relations section of our website at investors.braze.com for more information and a supplemental presentation related to today’s earnings announcement. During this call, we will make statements related to our business that are forward looking under federal securities laws and the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform act of 1995. These statements include, but are not limited to, statements regarding our financial outlook for the second quarter and the fiscal year ended January 31, 2027 the anticipated benefits from and product advancements due to the combination of Braze and ongoing developments in Braze AI technology our anticipated customer behaviors including vendor consolidation and replacement trends and their impact on Braze, our potential market opportunity and our ability to effectively execute on such opportunity and our long term financial targets and goals, including our expectations regarding our profitability framework. These statements are subject to a variety of risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from expectations and reflect our views only. As of today, we assume no obligation to update any such forward looking statements. For a discussion of the material risks and uncertainties that could affect our actual results, please refer to the risks identified in today’s press release and our SEC filings, both available on the Investor Relations section of our website. I’d also like to remind you that today’s call will include certain non GAAP financial measures used by management to evaluate our ongoing operations and aid investors in further understanding the company’s fiscal first quarter 2027 performance. In addition to the impact of these items have on the financial results, please refer to the reconciliations of our non GAAP financial measures to the most directly comparable financial measures calculated in accordance with US GAAP included in our earnings release under the Investor Relations section of our website. The non GAAP financial measures provided should not be considered as a substitute for or superior to the measures of financial performance prepared in accordance with US GAAP. And now I’d like to turn the call over to Bill.
Bill Magnuson (Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer)
Thank you Chris and good afternoon everyone. We’re off to a great start in fiscal 2027, reporting a quarter that demonstrates our market leadership and go to market momentum. We delivered our fourth straight quarter of organic and total revenue growth acceleration, generating $211 million of revenue which is up 30% year over year and 3% from the prior quarter. We also continue to realize operating efficiencies improving non GAAP operating margin by over 300 basis points year over year and we generated both strong operating cash flow and a record free cash flow amount of $27 million in the quarter. Trailing 12 month dollar based net retention also continued to improve rising another 100 basis points to 110% while inflecting positively with our large customer cohort as well, rising 100 basis points to 111%. We are pleased to raise our revenue guidance for the second quarter for the full year and to reiterate that we are on track to achieve the 400 basis points operating margin expansion promised for the fiscal year. The strong market momentum and buyer trends that we experienced at the end of fiscal year 2026 carried into the first quarter of fiscal 2027. Brands are moving quickly to transform their businesses with AI and to further leverage their investments in first party data and direct to consumer relationships. Q1 bookings were robust, driven by competitive takeaways, particularly in the enterprise. Net customer additions increased by 104 sequentially, up 16% year over year and customers spending $500,000 or more annually increased by 16 sequentially, up 33% year over year and our $1 million plus customer count rose by 27% year over year while we achieved $6 million plus deals and expanded our eight figure customer count to five. Notable new business wins and existing customer expansions include Bondora Group, ClassPass, Denny’s, Dayuna, Kueski, NRMA, Regal Cinemas, Salomon and Subway. In addition, we achieved a milestone new business win with a prominent AI lab, further expanding our presence across high scale data intensive workloads. Our upsell motion was also strong as customers adopted additional channels, deepened data platform integrations and and experimented with new and enhanced Braze AI tools such as Operator and Agent console. Braze is moving fast on the leading edge of frontier AI technologies and that pace of innovation is what enterprises globally are demanding, positioning us to become the standard for customer engagement. The legacy replacement cycle remained a fertile source of new business this quarter and demonstrated the market’s preference for AI driven solutions paired with high performance first party data activation, the combination required to execute modern cross channel customer engagement at scale. Since our founding, Braze has been built on the architectural choices that now turn out to be exactly what AI demands. Real time, a focus on first party data, a stream processor that learns, as it runs and enterprise grade security and performance built in from day one. By contrast, the same flaws that held back our competitors during the mobile and stream processing eras are hindering them again in the status quo. The architectures that could not handle real time data then cannot harness advanced AI. Today, as we accelerate product development, we are putting AI to work on the problems that our customers actually face. This quarter, brands across diverse industries and geographies graduated from legacy platforms to Braze. These include an expansion into LATAM with an existing global beauty customer and new business opportunities with with companies like an Australian online wagering business, a French athletic apparel company, a global retirement and investment solutions company, and one of the leading energy drink companies in the United States whose products are a longtime favorite at our HQ in New York and have been credited over the years with major productivity gains in R&D alongside our AI coding tools. Of course, our momentum continues to be driven by the four foundational strengths that we articulated last quarter. First, the Braze data platform’s ability to serve as the first party context engineering layer for AI at massive scale. Second, our vertically integrated data and decisioning architecture. Third, our composable AI architecture that makes Braze both smarter and easier to use and fourth, our position as both a revenue driving engine and mission critical operational capability. These strengths are compounding as we accelerate AI innovation and continue winning in the enterprise. The marketers using Braze are seeing better performance from the programs that they run today and they’re seeing the work itself change. What used to take a team of specialists is increasingly something that a small group can build, monitor and improve in a single afternoon. And the capabilities of the Braze platform are advancing at a rapid pace to support them. As I shared in March, Braze AI Operator and Braze AI Agent Console reached general availability early in the first quarter ahead of schedule, and we are seeing strong early adoption. Hundreds of customers are already using them to design and execute more sophisticated programs with more efficient teams. Braze AI Decisioning Studio’s new business pipeline is scaling rapidly and contributing to growth this year. And these are not just roadmap commitments. They are AI solutions that are in the wild and in our customers hands, earning their place in how some of the world’s most demanding brands engage with their customers. The early adoption we are seeing across Braze AI Operator, Braze AI Agent Console and Braze AI Decisioning Studio reflects a consistent pattern. Customers across industries and scale are finding that our AI delivers what general purpose tools cannot. It operates directly on their first party data, inside their existing workflows and against their specific goals. And we published an incredible example of what Braze AI Operator makes possible. And in a recent case study with Clio, a global family care platform that wanted to rebuild its member welcome series from the ground up. Clio knows their members well and engages with them frequently on their health and care journey. They use Braze to translate that knowledge into real time action. But their ambition was outpacing their ability to implement new personalization strategies and experiment at the scale that they desired. Now, with Braze AI Operator working alongside them directly inside the Braze Dashboard, Clio’s lifecycle Marketing Manager was able to quickly build and QA the code and configuration behind an upgraded welcome Experience that automatically adapts to each member’s care goals. The results were striking. Unsubscribes across the welcome series fell 81%, opt outs on the first email dropped 97% and app opens increased 284%. And that’s what Braze Aioperator was built to do. Put sophisticated execution in the hands of the people that are closest to understanding their customers without requiring an army to support them. The same principle AI that understands context rather than operating in the abstract is what led Luxury Escapes to take a different kind of leap with Braze AI Agent Console, one of the world’s fastest growing Travel companies with 9 million global members. The brand deployed Agent Console to push past the limits of rules based segmentation. Their team replaced fixed thresholds with an AI agent that evaluated 10 distinct behavioral signals simultaneously drew out each new user into the right welcome Cohort. The agent based approach delivered a 10% lift in revenue per user, driven entirely by conversion rate, along with a 7% increase in total transaction value and a 6% increase in purchase volume. What mattered most to the team was what the agent chose not to do. It did not default to the promo cohort to take the path of least resistance. It was reading the users in a way the rules never could, and the performance followed. Now, if you scale that same challenge up to 114 million loyalty members, the problem shifts from replacing segmentation rules to replacing the testing infrastructure itself. And that’s where Braze AI Decisioning Studio comes in. One of the world’s largest hotel franchisees adopted Decisioning Studio to move past a manual testing operation which was Previously a sequential manual 10 week cycle of build, test and analyze. Braze AI decisioning studio replaced that process with continuous automated experimentation across hundreds of simultaneous permutations, optimizing message timing and creative for each member in real time. They achieved double digit increases in click through rate with personalization of creative accounting for roughly half of the total uplift. We built Braze on the conviction that the brands closest to their customers would win their categories and AI is making that advantage compound faster. The combination of our data platform, our AI decisioning layer and our comprehensive channel suite gives customers something that no loosely assembled stack can replicate. Engagement. Rooted in their own first party data and delivered at the speed and scale modern consumers expect, Braze is becoming the standard for global customer engagement not because we declared it, but because the world’s leading brands are building with Braze and wielding the sophisticated AI that we’ve placed in their hands. We enter the rest of fiscal 2027 with strong commercial momentum, an accelerating product roadmap, and a team that is winning where it counts. I’m energized by what is ahead and before I close, you probably saw the news that we shared at the end of April that Isabel is stepping away and we are actively engaged in a CFO search at this time. I want to take a moment to thank Isabel for her dedication over the past six years. She’s been an incredible partner through some of our most defining moments, guiding us through the ipo, helping us scale the business to nearly a billion in ARR, and driving our path to profitability. Isabel, we’re grateful for everything that you’ve contributed to Braze and we’re excited to see what’s next for you. And with that, I’ll now turn the call over to Isabel.
Isabel Winkles (Chief Financial Officer)
Thank you Bill. Building and leading the finance team at Braze and working with you and your leadership team over the past six years has been one of the most rewarding experiences of my career. I’m proud of what we’ve accomplished together and I’m excited to witness Braze’s continued success ahead. As Bill stated, we reported a strong first quarter with revenue increasing 30% year over year to $211 million, driven by a combination of existing customer contract expansions, renewals and new business. Braze AI decisioning studio contributed $5.7 million of revenue in the quarter, implying an organic year over year growth rate of 26.7%. Our fourth straight quarter of organic revenue growth acceleration after a supply constrained Q4 that forced us to limit Decisioning Studio bookings in certain regions and also delay Decisioning Studio start dates, by multiple months. We are happy to share that we have successfully accelerated the hiring and ramp of our forward deployed delivery personnel which has enabled us to accelerate the pace and timing of Decisioning Studio start dates,. As a result, we expect revenue from decisioning studio in Q2 to grow 15 to 20% sequentially from Q1. Subscription revenue represents the primary component of our total top line, contributing 93% of our first quarter revenue, while the remaining 7% represents professional services revenue. Approximately 85% of the total professional services revenue is recurring revenue that is recognized ratably over the life of a contract due to just like our subscription revenue, these recurring professional services include dedicated support from forward deployed engineers, email deliverability services, and dedicated technical and strategic support and customer success Entitlements Total customer count increased 16% year over year to 2,713 customers as of April 30, 2026, up 371 from the same period last year and up 104 from the prior quarter. Our total number of large customers, which we define as those spending at least $500,000 annually, grew 33% year over year to 349 and as of April 30, 2026, these customers contributed 65% to our total ARR compared to a 62% contribution as of the same quarter last year. Measured across all customers, dollar based net retention was 110%, an improvement of approximately 100 basis points sequentially, while dollar based net retention for our large customers was 111%, also up approximately 100 basis points from the prior quarter. Expansion was again broadly distributed across industries and geographic regions in the first quarter. Our total remaining performance obligation was $1.1 billion, up 30% year over year and up 4% sequentially. Current RPO was $670 million, accelerating to 28% year over year from 27% in the prior quarter. The increases were driven by contract renewals and upsells, the signing of new customer contracts, and a continued modest increase in dollar weighted contract length. Non GAAP gross profit in the quarter was $142 million, representing a non GAAP gross margin of 67.4%. This compares to a non GAAP gross profit of $112 million and a non GAAP gross margin of 69.3% in the first quarter of last year. The decrease in the year over year margin was driven primarily by higher premium messaging volumes and the addition of decisioning studio headcount attributable to core total operating expenses were $132 million or 62% of revenue compared to $110 million or 68% of revenue in the prior year quarter. While the dollar increase reflects our investment to support overall growth, the improved efficiency reflects our disciplined approach as we work towards our long term profitability targets. Non GAAP operating income was $10.5 million or 5% of revenue compared to a non GAAP operating income of $2.8 million or 2% of revenue in the prior year quarter. Non GAAP net income attributable to braze shareholders in the quarter was $11.4 million or $0.10 per share compared to $7.3 million or $0.07 per share in the prior year quarter. Now turning to the balance sheet and cash flow statement, we ended the quarter with approximately $392 million in cash, cash equivalents, restricted cash and marketable securities. Cash provided by operations during the quarter was $28 million compared to cash provided by operations of $24 million in the prior year quarter. Including the cash impact of capitalized costs, free cash flow was a record $27 million in the quarter compared to $23 million in the prior year quarter. We expect our free cash flow to continue to fluctuate from quarter to quarter given the timing of customer and vendor payments. Now turning to guidance for the second quarter of fiscal 2027, we expect revenue to be in the range of $219.5 million to $220.5 million, which represents a year over year growth rate of approximately 22% at the midpoint. Second quarter non GAAP operating income is expected to be in the range of $17 million to $18 million at the midpoint. This implies a non GAAP operating margin of approximately 8%. Second quarter non GAAP net income is expected to be 17 to $18 million and second quarter non GAAP net income per share in the range of 15 to 16 cents per share based on approximately 114 million weighted average diluted shares outstanding during the period. For the full fiscal year 2027, we expect total revenue to be in the range of $895 million to $899 million, which represents a year over year growth rate of approximately 22% at the midpoint fiscal year 2027, non GAAP operating income is expected to be in the range of $70 million to $74 million at the midpoint. This implies a non GAAP operating margin of 8%. Non GAAP net income for the full fiscal year is expected to be in the range of 70 to 74 million dollars and and net income per share is expected to be 61 to 65 cents per share, based on a full year weighted average diluted share count of approximately 114 million shares. By integrating AI driven intelligence at the core of our platform, we continue to set the standard for best in class customer engagement. Braze remains fully committed to an ambitious innovation roadmap while staying firmly on track to meet the company’s long term financial goals. And with that, we’ll now open the call for Questions. Operator, please begin the Q and A.
OPERATOR
We will now begin Q and A. For today’s session we’ll be utilizing the Raise hand feature. If you’d like to ask a question, simply click on the Raise hand button at the bottom of your screen Once you’ve been called on, please unmute yourself, begin to ask your question. Please limit to one question and one follow up before jumping back in the queue. Thank you. We will now pause a moment to assemble the queue. Our first question comes from Arjun Bhatia with William Blair. Please unmute your line and ask your question.
Arjun Bhatia (Equity Analyst)
All right, thank you so much for taking my questions, Isabel. It’s been a pleasure working together all these years and wish you the best in the future. And actually I wanted to maybe touch on your comment on the the bottleneck sort of in Decisioning Studio. I’m curious, how much of a headwind was it not having those FTEs that you talked about? And you know, now that you’re kind of looking ahead and kind of taking into account the demand for Decisioning Studio, how do you feel about the hiring and the headcount that you have brought on board over the last several months here to address the bottleneck?
Isabel Winkles (Chief Financial Officer)
Yeah, so thanks for the question and thanks for the comment. So we feel really good about the momentum and the pace of hiring. And actually, so I won’t break out specifically the impact in Q1, but the purpose of the comments that I made in my prepared remarks are actually to give you an indication of the impact of the hiring and where Q2 revenue is likely to land. So you have given a range for the sequential off of Q1, so you can kind of see the momentum sort of starting to build there. And that’s, you know, thanks to that momentum that we have in the headcount increases. So we’re really pleased with that. We’ve gone from zero to one on, you know, headcount in certain locations where we just didn’t have this capacity. So we were strong in kind of the Americas region Because that’s really where Decisioning Studio was kind of born and then had to start with EMEA and apac and we have now done that.
Arjun Bhatia (Equity Analyst)
Okay, perfect, understood. That’s very helpful. And then Bill, one for you. It seems just like on broader AI adoption with the, you know, with, with Operator and Agent Console especially, it seems like customers are starting to adopt these capabilities. It sounds like you even had a win with, with an AI lab. But I’m curious how, how you think about just customer readiness to adopt AI and they’re sort of dealing with this in every function of their organization. Where does customer engagement rank sort of in this priority of AI projects and you know, kind of being at the frontier of, of AI across the organization for.
Bill Magnuson (Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer)
Yeah, so I think there’s two components and we break down our product roadmap in the same way. When we look at the demand signal and the prioritization from AI, one of them is transforming marketer workflows and making sure that teams are getting maximal productivity that they’re able to leverage the other AI tools that they’re bringing into their tool chain. And we see that through increased usage of the Braze MCP server and a lot of different usage patterns expanding there. So the other side is on the performance and the quality of personalization and relevance optimization and other aspects of decisioning that we can bring to customers so that one, they can achieve better results with their customers. But two, it also feeds back into the productivity, really allowing the marketer to ascend above the drudge work of going campaign by campaign really drive higher levels of experimentation that lead to better performance and allowing them to operate more as a conductor or a component composer of AI capabilities rather than being in the tool, working through or being in the tool line by line, working through a lot of the manual processes that we’ve seen in the past. And so I think both of those are key to the transformation agendas within organizations. But we are also still seeing that customer education is paramount both in the decisioning space specifically as well as in AI driven optimization more generally. And I think we’ve been really happy with how our full spectrum approach that is leveraging reinforcement learning, gen AI and agentic approaches together is developing into a robust suite of Braze AI offerings and a really exciting roadmap. We’re also seeing from Decisioning Studio what we were confident of in our analysis of the Appriss Fit acquisition last year, which is that it is a hard and complex problem space. It takes careful data science and a deep business problem understanding and a strong appreciation of the role of the marketer and all of that to meaningly solve it. Just the product quality, the quality of the deployments, the excitement that we see from people adopting new ways of working with Operator as well as new ways of driving personalization and relevance optimization with both Agent Console and Decisioning Studio and Content Optimizer as well are all pointed in a really optimistic direction. I think we’re continuing to see this be an important prioritization point in broader AI transformation agendas simply because it both improves improves employee productivity and it drives the bottom line.
Brett Huff (Equity Analyst)
Your next question comes from the line of Scott Excuse me from the line of Brett Huff with Stevens. Brett, please unmute your line and ask your question. Good evening everybody. Isabel, good luck on the next chapter. It’s been nice working with you so you’ll be missed. Two questions for me, one to follow up on the Operator point. Our understanding is that that’s really been helpful in showing the power of AI to not just your more sophisticated marketers, but maybe those who aspire to be more sophisticated and has maybe made entry into that AI buying motion better. I think that happened in fourth quarter and it sounds like maybe with some more forward-deployed engineers it could be happening again. Can you talk a little bit about if that’s the sort of tip of the spear and what you’re seeing in day to day selling and is that dynamic that we understand to be true?
Bill Magnuson (Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer)
As I mentioned on our post Q4 earnings call, which was actually just 64 days ago, we had recently released both Operator and Agent Console to general availability well ahead of schedule. Since then we also completed the public launch of Operator and Agent Console and we did that on stage alongside live product demos at the Braze City by City London event, which is our second largest event of the annual calendar and that was at the end of April. Audience feedback was tremendously positive. We’ve since been featuring Operator and Agent Console at Grow with Braze events around the world. We’ve even hosted partner and customer hackathons to continue to drive ideation and adoption. And we’re also moving fast on enhancing Decisioning Studio self serve features. And we recently expanded support for Content Optimizer to include SMS, MMS, and RCS in addition to email and push support which was already there. So a multifaceted roadmap that continues to advance quickly. Customers are definitely still in different phases. We’ve got some that have full production use cases and we’ve been sharing the case studies on those both in these earnings calls as well as on our website in order to Both share that with all of you, but also to help get the creative juices flowing amongst our customer base. These are definitely new working paradigms. In particular, being able to incorporate agentic capability into Canvas and into that control plane, really understanding how to use the data sources that are there effectively. We’ve done a lot of work in the product design to make sure that we can deliver context to these agents on a per user basis that’s derived from first party data in a way that has the right operational guardrails, security and privacy guarantees, as well as the performance that is required in order to run these in B2C messaging, use cases or in product experiences. And so there’s definitely still work to be done broadly across the customer base to first lay down the baseline education, then encourage early adoption and experimentation and moving that into scaled use cases. And we’ve got teams mobilized around the company to continue to push ahead on those goals, both for customers to be adopting Operator to accelerate their own workflows as well as Agent Console and Decisioning studio and Content optimizer to enhance the outcomes that they’re achieving with Braze.
Brett Huff (Equity Analyst)
That’s great. And just quick follow up to put a finer point on the context question. As you imagine, we continue to get questions on the AI eating SaaS. It seems like you all are building in a lot of AI in a very specific and purposeful way. Can you talk a little bit about this idea of pre processing or context enabling pre processing before giving data to an LLM in order to start thinking about total cost of large language model (LLM) token use, making those more efficient and just kind of, it seems to us re emphasizing the importance of SaaS generally, but braze in particular in a very sort of important cost element that’s going up quickly.
Bill Magnuson (Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer)
Yeah, absolutely. And you know, I think anyone that has worked with the likes of Cloud, Cohere or some of the other what I would call single player agentic harnesses that are out there? You know, we know that these tools have limitations. They still require a lot of babysitting and handholding. You know, they can go off the rails, especially, especially on long running tasks. And similarly, the quality of the outcomes have a lot to do with the context that you provide. Because a lot of their intelligence capability also rides on their ability to focus on the right things and to assign attention to the right aspects of the context. And so a big part of what Agent Console provides is not just pre processing of that context using the stream processing engine, and the canvas runtime that we have today so that that context can be efficiently and rapidly provided to the agents so that they don’t need to use a whole bunch of tokens going and processing all that context in the first place. But it also serves the role of designing and compressing the context so that the attention can be placed in the attention is more obvious for the agent that allows for us to not have to rely on the most expensive, slowest, state of the art models. We can use faster, higher performance and cheaper models within those workflows, which is better suited for, at least with current technology, is certainly better suited for these B2C use cases. And it allows for us to kind of manage the overall quality of outcomes, performance and cost tension that exists when you’re using these models. So absolutely a lot of careful product design, a lot of learnings. We’re very fortunate to be right on the frontier with the most ambitious tech tech forward data driven marketers on the planet, who of course have always characterized the braze customer base. We’re getting great engagement from our agency and systems integrator partners on this front as well as they’re bringing in specialist teams to be able to really flex these tools in new and creative ways. And that’s coming together with what Canvas has always done a great job of which is being a control plane. But of course the job of the control plane in a AI native world also requires care, full attention to context engineering. And so that is a big part of where we’ve been focusing product development. And it’s something that we think will continue to be a really important role that the software layer will play on top of the models.
OPERATOR
Awesome, I appreciate it. Thank you. Absolutely. Your next question comes from the line of Scott Berg with Needham. Please unmute your line and ask your question
Scott Berg (Equity Analyst)
everyone. Nice quarter here. First question is on jump in professional services revenue in the quarter, Isabel. My guess is that the jump there is partially related to the, you know, these new forward-deployed engineers and they’re hiring and getting ramped up. But my question is one to validate that and is, is this kind of the new run rate level? And you know, as we think about this line item is truly a enabler of selling additional subscription revenue. And then lastly in that professional services kind of great question there is how much of that is pressing on gross margins today? Obviously the premium channels last couple quarters have pushed on margins a little bit because of their costs, but how much further do we expect those increase in professional services revenues to maybe eat at gross margins? Thank you.
Isabel Winkles (Chief Financial Officer)
Yeah, thanks for the question. So just first yes, you know, yes, it’s partially related to the four deployed personnel that mix in, but actually a bigger part of it is related to some packaging changes that have occurred relative to how we sell our customer success (CS) entitlements. They were previously kind of fully bundled into the subscription piece with a bit of an allocation into professional services based on activity. We’ve actually become a little bit more specific there and created some line items and SKUs for CS purchases. This allows customers to have a little bit more transparency in terms of what they’re buying. It allows us to realign the workforce and have kind of the right sort of number of people that are actually being paid for by customers. And then from an accounting perspective, it simply creates the fact pattern that you’re starting to see with a bit more of an allocation or attribution rather into professional services. But part of the reason I wanted to disclose the percentage of the professional services that behaves on a recurring basis is we thought it was important to explain that there is no fundamental change to the revenue recognition. It is just a geographic change between the subscription line item and the professional services line item. So that I think that’s kind of how I would describe it. And then in terms of the gross margin impact, it’s a little bit of an impact there from the personnel, but we’ve also been able to kind of realign things with strategic cost optimized location strategy there and really the messaging is, is kind of a primary component to the gross margin story.
Scott Berg (Equity Analyst)
Understood, thank you. And I’d be remiss to say, or not to say good luck, wishing you good, good luck in the next spot and hopefully we get to work together again. Thank you. Yeah. But from a follow up question, you know, how do we think about kind of the impact on sales cycles? Bill, with all the new AI modules that you’ve released the last six to eight months has been a huge innovation boon for the company, including a couple that you’ve released early here recently. But is that delaying sales cycles? Is it speeding it up? It seems like deals are getting bigger, but sometimes that can be offset by time frames. How do we think about this in this environment where spending seems to be on the rise on the increase?
Bill Magnuson (Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer)
Yeah, I think you’re seeing in the bookings results that we’re seeing higher velocity decision making. We’ve also seen it in our competitive win rates and I think those things work together with a strong differentiation in the offering which is of course led by the AI roadmap since that’s front and center for all purchasers right now and kind of everyone evaluating either software transitions or new purchases into their technology ecosystem that is coming together in order to create more efficient sales cycles. And you know, we’re seeing that we shared that in the bookings results following Q4. We similarly, you know, great competitive win rates and high, you know, higher deal velocity, than we have in prior years throughout the quarter. And so we’re responding to that with our own teams as well in terms of how we’re organizing within our sales teams. You know, as we’ve talked about in the past, we’ve also been doubling down on verticalization of our sales teams in this year so that we’ve got stronger familiarity and more alignment within the key verticals, you know, within braze, that’s, that’s really helping drive alignment not just with customers so that we’re speaking their language and that we understand their business models more deeply, but it’s also helping with alignment with partners and within the broader ecosystem. And partner alignment tends to help out deal cycles as well because the architectural questions get resolved faster and we’re able to bring in the social proof of trusted partners that are already installed at partners to be able to expand or graduate into Braze. And so I think we’re liking what we’re seeing there. Similarly, as you mentioned, I think we’re seeing pretty similar macro conditions as we have over the last few quarters, so not a big change to really report there, but we’re seeing the opportunities for higher velocity and we’re seizing them. Excellent.
OPERATOR
Nice quarter. Thanks again. Thank you. Your next question comes from Ryan MacWilliams with Wells Fargo. Please unmute your line and ask your question.
Ryan MacWilliams (Equity Analyst)
Excellent. Thanks for taking the question, Bill. It looks like you’re seeing monthly active users increasing and your net retention is increasing. I know monthly active users (MAU) is not a great metric for your business, but it just seems like the digital ecosystem over the last few quarters has really shifted for the better, you know, AI or not,. What are some of the things you’re seeing from your customers and are you seeing your existing customers like activate on more campaigns and more message sending at this point?
Bill Magnuson (Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer)
Yeah, well, we’re definitely seeing more campaign creation and in fact, we saw an interesting proof point of that that parallels our own experience with use of agentic coding tools,, which is like, of course, with our engineering teams. As soon as you can start to pump out code faster, the bottleneck appears at reviewing that code and deploying and releasing that code. And we’re seeing similar impacts within our own customer base where operator and use of Other agentic tooling is speeding up campaign creation, content creation, people are doing more experimentation, et cetera. But that of course is increasing both the demands on QA for all of them, as well as just the complexity that comes about when you’ve got more programs running simultaneously. And so we actually, at the Customer Advisory Board that we did at London, City by City QA, Automated QA and Agentic Automation of qa, which we were very happy to share with everyone, actually entered beta that same day as an offshoot of our agent Console product was one of the top demanded features. And that’s actually the first time I can remember that being the case in a customer advisory board. So I think that you’re already seeing some of the implications of enhanced marketer productivity moving into other parts of their overall workflows. And then of course there are a bunch of caveats around monthly active users, but of course we’re happy to see growth amongst the overall network, growth amongst the mobile community as well. I know that you’ve been closely tracking App Store submissions and things like that, and obviously those fact patterns remind me of 10 years ago as we first launched into the mobile universe and those mobile app stores started to take off. And so we certainly operate up at a level where those mobile apps will need to mature over time. And we’re no stranger to that from the early days of the App Store. Even today there’s millions of apps out there and we only have single digit thousands of customers. So obviously there’s a match there for our business model and how those mobile apps will mature and then graduate to becoming braze customers over time. And we’re really excited to bring them into the picture. But we also do have a number of very fast growing, fast maturing AI native applications that have come into our customer base over time too. And so definitely an exciting time to broadly be in software. People are out there building, they’re growing, they’re expanding and that’s great to see. And we’re excited to be putting more advanced tools into the hands of the marketers that are responsible for the customer experience and the growth of those applications. And we’re seeing their workflows evolve and change in front of our eyes as well. And we’re moving fast to be able to continue to provide the best tools possible for them them.
Ryan MacWilliams (Equity Analyst)
Excellent. Yeah, great to see the prominent AI lab win and ramping AI natives. Isabel, you know, pleasure to work together. Just wanted a point of clarification on the professional services side. You mentioned CS credits. What are those? Just like to that’s not something I’m too familiar with. And then just from your perspective, it seems like this is coming up in my investor conversations. Like, do you just feel it as like moving one bucket to another? Like the composition is the revenue is very similar to last quarter. It’s more just an accounting change for this quarter. And the difference between the mix there.
Isabel Winkles (Chief Financial Officer)
Yeah, so that’s exactly right. So let me clarify. CS is it’s simply the customer success entitlements that were previously bundled in with the subscription platform fee are now separately skewed out and can be purchased separately by, by the customers. So that’s, that’s what you’re seeing. And just to do the math for you, what this means is that, you know, I said that about 85% of our professional services is recurring. Then obviously the subscription component is recurring. So that means in total, you’re looking at about 99% of our revenue is on a recurring basis.
Ryan MacWilliams (Equity Analyst)
Okay, appreciate the clarification. Thank you.
OPERATOR
Your next question comes from Parker Lane with Stifle. Please unmute your line and ask your question.
Parker Lane (Equity Analyst)
Hey team, good afternoon. Thanks for taking the question here, Bill. One of the things you guys talked about when you brought Ed, was not only verticalization, but adding a lot more capacity to this business. And I think you messaged this earlier this year that you’d see a big ramp this into the second half of the year. Can you just talk about how that’s tracking according to expectations or where that is and where you expect that to have the biggest impact on the business??
Bill Magnuson (Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer)
Yeah, so hiring across the sales and field organizations is absolutely a priority in the business right now. As you know, we have in particular in the enterprise, there is a relatively long ramp time as new account executives come into seat and you know, get to know their patch and engage in enterprise deal cycles which are, you know, of a typical length at Braze, but still counts in quarters sometimes. In quarters sometimes. And so I. Early, early in the year, sales, hiring and capacity expansion has been an important priority. It’ll continue to be. We’re on track for that so far through the year and continuing to bring in great people into the organization. You know, I think that the Braze story is resonating really well amongst the software category right now. The combination of our results as well as our AI roadmap is just bringing in some really excellent talent and we’ve been really excited to be able to continue to our teams, through this period.
Parker Lane (Equity Analyst)
Got it. And obviously you’ve seen some nice improvements in DVNR here and all Cohorts of the business. With Decisioning Studio coming in its first year in the business and you’ve got operator and agent console out there, what’s the right framework to think about the potential impact to dbnr? Do you think about these tools as helping you sustain these levels? Is there potential for it to break out further from here? Anything? That would be great.
OPERATOR
Well, so first of all, Decisioning Studio, obviously because of its price point at around 200,000 to $300,000 per use, case has the ability to have a more direct short term impact on upsells. But we’ve also been broadly expanding the product portfolio, putting more SKUs in place for our sales team to go and sell, more use case expansion, more channels, more AI to be able to optimize those channels. And we’re really looking at it as a full portfolio play. Got it, thank you. Next question comes from Brian Peterson with Raymond James. Please unmute your line and ask your question.
Brian Peterson
Thanks for taking the question. And Isabel, it’s been a pleasure working with you.
Bill Magnuson (Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer)
I’ll keep it to one. So just as we’re thinking about the importance of first party data, I know in AI that will be critically important, Bill, I’m just, I’m curious how much that’s a factor in some of these win rates improving that you’re seeing. Just would love to get any color there. Thanks guys. Yeah, I mean, I think the key thing is just that the differentiation is clear right now. And when you look at Braze Inc versus the broader competitive set, you know, we combine together the industry leading vision with a incredible customer community that we’re able to develop at the frontier of these technologies right alongside. That also includes our partner ecosystem alongside all the amazing agencies and systems integrators that we work with that continue to push ahead. And we’re moving really fast on development across the full suite of Braze AI offerings. I think we also had huge starting benefit in that our platform is vertically integrated. It’s been almost entirely organically developed, which means that there’s not a bunch of hidden complexity and tech debt throughout the system. We’ve done a great job over the years of continuing to upgrade underlying programming languages, different frameworks, major versions of all of our underlying technologies, et cetera. And that puts us in a great position to be able to move fast with our roadmap and to be able to scale new capability on top of what is the industry’s most reliable, highest performance stream processor in this space. And that just gives us a ton of latitude to be able to develop quickly. And so, so when you combine together a very strong fundamental starting point from an engineering and a product health and a product quality standpoint with an ambitious roadmap, the ability to invest in R and D due to our scale, really great signals from the market in terms of getting access to real time feedback from the most innovative marketers and partners out in the ecosystem. And I think that combines together to put us into an advantageous position that we’ve been leveraging for several quarters now through this AI buildout. And that’s coming together in real, tangible, concrete products that customers can see in sales cycles, they can use in free trials, they can put their hands on them, they can deploy them in production and they can scale them into production use cases. And both the leading vision there as well as the fact that they’re live and they’re available now are combining together to really resonate in the market.
Matt Van Vliet (Equity Analyst)
It. Thanks Bill. Yep. Your next question comes from Matt Van Vliet with Cantor Fitzgerald. Please unmute your line and ask your question. Yeah, good afternoon. Thanks for taking the question and it’s been nice working with you as well. Good luck on, on the next step there. I guess when you look at overall adoption of, of the flexible credits, especially as premium messaging is coming in, I guess at this point in the year, how, how are customers tracking versus maybe even where they entered the year in terms of allocation there? what’s been the pace of customers coming back and just realizing the value and looking to upgrade their allotments before maybe some of the critical fourth quarter selling season?
Isabel Winkles (Chief Financial Officer)
Yeah. So look, I mean the uptake in the adoption of the flexible credits, it’s really the only way we sell. You know, and we’ve actually changed the name. We’re now calling them action credits because they do encompass more than messaging. And so the, you know, the uptake, it’s really the only way we sell. So all of our customers that are renewing and all of our customers that are buying new, they’re all on this, this approach and it’s, you know, there is the opportunity for more mid quarter, sorry mid contract term upsells. We’re seeing kind of generally similar buying patterns where we’ve been talking about this for you know, some time. Customers generally buying a little bit closer to their known needs and then upskilling, upscaling their, their purchases as they, as they need more. So look, we’re really pleased with the direction of travel of the dollar based net retention that is an element to it of seeing kind of the upsells that are coming in through, through that, that skew with the flexible credits. But you know, it’s all kind of working together with helping us sort of retain and help customers get the most out of the platform.
Matt Van Vliet (Equity Analyst)
And then following up on the FDE discussion, I guess two part one, how do you feel about. I know you said you’re ramping up the hiring and it seems to be going well, but is there still a significant amount more capacity to be added in to meet the demand you’re already seeing in Decisioning Studio and then kind of wrapped in that? I guess. At what point in the first quarter did you get back to a point where you could start meeting the demand levels? So thinking about kind of how much of the quarter actually was significantly bogged down versus some of the commentary you made going into the second quarter.
Bill Magnuson (Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer)
Yeah. So just to give you a quick measure on the ending end of your question, as we ended Q4, we were pushing, we were being forced to push start dates on Decisioning Studio deployments in excess of four months in some cases depending on the region. We’ve cut that about in half over the course of Q1, and that’s through both the ramp and the hiring. But also doing things like doing in person group onboarding in order to accelerate the readiness dates of those new hires and just be able to get people deployed into new projects faster.. There’s also a robust roadmap that the Decisioning Studio team is executing on to be able to create more self serve capability. And they also have a version of the Braze Operator that is under, under active development right now that will be able to start to do some of the activities that were previously delivered through those personnel. And so we’ve got a lot of development underway both in terms of the practices with how we grow the team as well as in the product itself in order to be able to more rapidly deliver Decisioning Studio to do so with more efficiency so that we can just get more instances of it out in market and so that we can deliver it to customers faster. And so that’s still a journey that we’re going to be on, but we still have a very robust roadmap of improvements that were, you know, that are, that we’ve got high certainty on, are going to continue to improve that picture over time and we’re excited about it. I think at a base level we’ve also just been really excited to see that while there’s been a lot of bluster and you know, recent entrance into Decisioning from a competitive standpoint, we continue to See that no one can hold a candle to Decisioning Studio in terms of the overall product quality. For those that have been with the Braze story for a long time, that’s a familiar position for Braze to be in, and in a position we like to be in. And we’re continuing to invest heavily in making Decisioning Studio faster to deploy more self serve and there’s a lot more to come on that. But I’ll also say that we’re very happy with the foundation and today’s momentum as well, even in an increasing competitive environment.
OPERATOR
Great. Thank you. Your next question comes from Clark Wright with DA Davidson. Please unmute your line and ask your question.
Bill Magnuson (Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer)
Awesome. Thank you. Bill, you noted during the prepared remarks that one of the logo wins this quarter was a prominent AI lab and increasing your presence in data intensive workloads is a priority. Can you talk about the steps you need to take or the partnerships you’re leading into in order to increase your presence and specifically with data intensive workloads? Yeah. So first of all, I think that this is a continuation of a journey that we’ve been on for multiple years for Braze having quick and complete access to basically all relevant sources of first party data within the customer’s ecosystem. Whether those are directly generated by user activity and we need to process them in milliseconds or they’re the result of deep data science work that’s being done to build apps, additional models or other data warehousing, long running work like identity resolution, what have you. We want to be able to have rapid and complete access to all the insights available in order to drive the quality of the personalization and the other decisions that we make along the way. And so that has meant a robust investment and partnership posture for Braze for a long time. We’re continuing to lean into that that we’ve got an exciting roadmap of continued expansion for the Braze data platform as well as for the MCP servers and API integrations into the Braze data platform throughout the rest of the year. We also have exciting advancements that we continue to push ahead across the likes of Google BigQuery and Snowflake and Databricks, and you’re going to continue to hear more about those throughout the year. So it’s always been and will continue to be a multifaceted investment posture. The most important thing for Braze is that we have rapid and complete access to the insights that we need in order to drive the intelligence that lives in the orchestration and the control plane and the personalization layers of Braze so that we can deliver the best possible product and messaging experiences to customers. And the other side of that is also of course, getting access to creative and content. We announced the Creative Studio launch at Braze City by City in London at the end of April that included integrations with both Figma and Canva as well, which we’re really excited to continue to develop and expand throughout the course of the year. And really just looking at these pipelines that feed the Braze orchestration engine, which is inclusive of context of all kinds. And that means making sure that we’ve got robust investments into the Braze data platform that the Braze Creative Studio feeds that from a content and a creative standpoint. And then of course, our composable intelligence vision of the agentic capabilities and a lot of the context that drives them all integrated directly into the Braze ecosystem. Awesome. Thank you.
Isabel Winkles (Chief Financial Officer)
Then Isabel, one for you. In terms of the penetration rate of the Decision Studio, how should we think about the ramp there given the headwinds release, the friction that you’ve kind of, kind of aforementioned in the prepared remarks? And where should we think about that heading forward as we look at the new logo growth that we see today? Yeah, so look, I mean we’re, we’re really focused on continuing to upsell our installed base with, with the capability. So remember, we count the customer at the ultimate parent level and so we’re going to see first, we’re going to see kind of deeper penetration of sales of Decisioning Studio to within our existing customer base. So I wouldn’t necessarily look for that to like increase the logo count immediately, but we are, you know, certainly excited. Both comments that I made and then comments that Bill made around the headcount that we’ve been able to add on the four deployed personnel. And so, you know, we were excited to kind of continue to fulfill that pipeline. The pipeline continues to be really robust and to build, you know, through the rest of the year..
OPERATOR
Thank you. Please keep questions to one question. No follow up. Your next question comes from Nick Altman with btig. Please unmute your line and ask your question.
Nick Altman
Awesome. Thank you. Isabelle, it’s been great working with you and wishing you the best of luck in the new role. Bill, the legacy replacement cycle seems to be continuing very nicely. I think you mentioned eight figure customers are now at five and my question is how much has has Decisioning Studio Agent Console Operator sort of driven that acceleration? And I understand some of these customers may not be adopting these tools right away, but maybe just talk about how the new AI offerings, the innovation, and the roadmap is actually driving some of that replacement strength that you’re seeing and whether that gives you more confidence in adoption and monetization on the agentix side over the medium term. Thanks. Yeah. So I think all the commentary that I’ve had about the role that our AI roadmap and our AI offerings have had on new business also applies to a lot of these expansions because frankly, you know, everyone is looking at their software stacks right now and questioning whether or not they have the right capabilities and whether they’ve got the right partnerships and the right vendors to be able to make sure they’re taking advantage of this AI transformation as maximally as possible. And so, you know, you’re not winning expansions like that with, with organizations at this scale and at this level of sophistication without them having full confidence that you’re a vendor that they can rely upon to partner with, you know, as, as part of their own AI journey. And so I think it’s, it’s just as applicable there. One of the other things that we’re seeing, and you know, Braze’s product and our strategy has always been at the convergence of, you know, both the marketer experience and the, the raw capabilities to be able to drive high performance personalization and such, which I mentioned earlier, you know, both the marketer experience and the consumer experience, but also the continued evolution of consumer behaviors and consumer devices. And we’ve spoke about this a lot in the past, but, you know, we are also seeing that in the face of some of the uncertainty around things like agentic commerce that, you know, within the retail category is an example, companies are starting to prioritize CRM higher right now because they know that, as we’ve seen in so many other categories that have been disintermediated by agents, whether those are online travel agents, you know, in the story from a decade ago or, you know, more than a couple decades ago, or the story from a decade ago of, you know, a lot of the restaurant brands being disintermediated by delivery platforms, you know, and, and of course, you can see in Braze’s history that we’ve benefited from those disintermediations because it, it causes brands to double down on connecting more directly with their customers to make sure that they’ve got the first party data to understand who those customers are, that they can communicate with them, and that they can, you know, nudge them toward being customers that don’t come in through these disintermediated These disintermediated platforms or other user experiences where, where they achieve lower margin, they don’t get as much data, etc. Etc. And so in preparation for potentially seeing more agentic commerce out there, we’re actually seeing retailers doubling down on their CRM investments so that they can get closer to their customers and they can understand them more completely and be able to keep those lines of communication open. And so I think that across the board we’re seeing the drive for additional marketer productivity, we’re seeing the demand for greater performance and results through wielding these advanced capabilities. And then we’re also seeing the continued drive toward building strong first party relationships with customers, which is of course in our mind a sustainable business tactic through all generations of technology. And we absolutely know that the brands that thrive through this period are going to be the ones that continue to keep a strong connection with their customer and braze is exactly how they’re going to do that.
OPERATOR
Your next question comes from Derek Wood with TD Cohen. Please unmute your line and ask your question.
Derek Wood (Equity Analyst)
Great, thanks guys. And Isabelle, great to work with you. Good luck on your next endeavor. I wanted to ask about the US carrier fees on the SMS side of the business. They have been on the rise. Just curious how you guys are kind of absorbing this. Are you passing this on to customers or not? Have you seen any impact from like demand elasticity and what are the implications for gross margins especially as we look through the rest of the year?
Isabel Winkles (Chief Financial Officer)
Yeah, so we approach carrier fees. We’ve approached these in a very, very consistent manner over the last several, several years. We do pass those on directly to the customer and so that, that we’ve been very consistent. So any changes in price there are borne by, by the customer, I would say. We’ve been talking about premium messaging channels having that impact over time on, on the gross margin. This is a compone, but it’s all, it all mixes in. So it’s everything from sort of WhatsApp to general SMS carrier fees, all all of it combined.
OPERATOR
Your next question comes from Ramo Lensiau with Barclays. Please unmute your line and ask your question.
Sammy Coggin
Hey guys, this is Sammy Coggin on for Ramla show. Thanks for taking the question. Bill, as a system studio and agent console, continue to gain traction with your customer base. How do you think about the long term coexistence between large language model (LLM)-based agentic decisioning and reinforcement learning based decisioning? Are those use cases or customer verticals that might be better suited for one versus the other? So the short answer is absolutely there are different use cases that either of those technologies in isolation as well as various hybridizations of them are going to be best suited for. And that that truth is a big part of our full spectrum AI strategy that we continue to build out to go back to also the split between the marketer experience and marketer productivity and then the customer experience and customer outcomes. We are also seeing a variety of different approaches on both sides of that. And so on the operator and the marketer experience side, you know, we’re also actively expanding our investments in our MCP service and our API suite. And in the proprietary Braze operator, we also have customers who are already using agentic computer use to automatically operate our dashboard. But we believe that hooking those agentic harnesses into operators brace specific training and tool use is going to be the stronger usage path in the medium and long term. We prioritize building out the in dashboard experience for operator first, but we’re also investing in allowing the operator’s intelligence to be flexibly leveraged through a variety of usage patterns. Patterns, You know, we’re also on that point, really excited to see innovation coming from customers utilizing cowork and other agent harnesses to interface directly with Braze. But we also know that we’re still in the beginning of that. You know, most agentic tool use still requires a ton of handholding. It’s also mostly individual or what we call like single player exercise of those tools Today. Marketing is typically a multiplayer activity and it inherently crosses over a lot of different disciplines, it touches broad parts of the customer journey and it benefits from both creativity and deep data analysis which often is done better in teams. And so we want to enable Braze AI capabilities for the marketer in a composable and a flexible fashion, supporting a variety of both single player and multiplayer AI enabled workflows. And we’re going to continue to invest heavily there across the decisioning side. I think it’s also helpful to go back and look at at how we’ve interoperated with data and creative and personalization sources over the years. We see both in our partner ecosystem as well as from hyperscaler services and home built capabilities that often customers will want to hook into Braze in order to either provide additional data sources or maybe there’s a specialized vendor from the Braze Alloys partner ecosystem or something that they’ve been investing in for a long time internally. For us, the critical components of the architectural moat are ensuring the real time access to high quality first party data. We do that with the Braze data platform and our composable design, we want to maintain a strong foothold in the control plane, which we do through Canvas, Agent, Console, through Decisioning and through our many air traffic control capabilities and things like content optimizer. And so within that, and specifically to your question around which technology approaches, I think when we think about the relevant control plane and the right tool for the job, a lot of it has to do with are we engaging in long running aspects of the customer journey, Are we responding to a cultural event or an emergency? Is this an operational need? Are we trying to fulfill a product experience versus provide some sort of real time notification usage use case? These all have very different demands on them, but they’re all in customer engagement. And so you need to be able to have different intelligence approaches to enhance and optimize across all of those different use cases. And of course the huge surface area of that problem both creates a gravity for us to progressively take responsibility for new use cases and new channels. You see that in the strong dvnr, you see that in the expansion of the channels that our customers adopt over time. And the diverse set of install points allows for Braze’s predictive models, our AI recommenders and optimizers and our decisioning systems to all enhance the orchestration work that we’re already doing. And that drives more value to the customers and it’s higher revenue opportunities for Braze. And so you know, customers are going to mix and match not just Braze’s intelligence systems with first and third party add on, they’re also going to mix and match the composable hybrid solutions that we provide together. And that’s been an important part of our design and differentiation for many years. And so we’re excited to see these new capabilities coming into the fold. But from a composability of design perspective, it really fits into the strategy that we’ve been running for years.
OPERATOR
Your next question comes from DJ Hines with canaccord. Please unmute your line and ask your question.
DJ Hines (Equity Analyst)
Hey, thank you guys. Isabel, congrats to you and best of luck. Bill, I’m curious if you’re seeing any of your large enterprise customers kind of rethink organizational structure around customer engagement because of AI and then like longer term, do you still think marketers and customer experience (CX) teams themselves remain the primary user or does this all go autonomous at some point? Yeah, so first of all, one of the things that we continue to see is something that’s been true for a long time in our customer base, which is that Braze is typically being used by small agile teams of what I would call builder marketers. These are marketers that are on the leading edge of using new technology. They’re doing data driven and experimental work and they build these experiences and they use Brazed and other tooling around Braze in order to kind of build and deploy the ideas and the experiments that they want to run and the optimizations around those. And so unlike large support desks or other teams that have historically had a lot of headcount, Braze has always been wielded by the small, resourceful tech forward teams. And so their productivity is of the utmost importance because they’re always limited and small and the work that they can do and especially, you know, every time we bring new capability to provide better performance and better optimization, the demand on those teams to go and leverage that in order to drive the bottom line exists within those companies. And in order for them to fulfill those demands, they need higher levels of productivity. And so putting that in a virtuous cycle where we create the opportunity for those marketers to deliver more impact and then they of course subsequently need to be made more productive. And we work on both of those in a loop. I think that with respect to org chart evolution, Braze has also driven a lot of org chart evolution over time. In our early days it wasn’t uncommon to have every single channel like separate web, mobile and email teams. Now it’s much more normal to just have a consumer CRM or a customer engagement or a growth team that is responsible for cross channel engagement. The way that the responsibility bridges into product experiences versus messaging experiences tends to vary from company to company. But the trend line is all about having a more holistic point of view over more and more of the customer experience and being able to put the management of that customer experience in the hands of someone that is also deeply in tune with the business strategy and the business goals. And the convergence of both that perspective and the deep understanding of the customer and the business goals has historically lived in marketing and growth organizations or product organizations. Braze actively sells into all three of those organizations across our customer base. Of course we predominantly sell into a CMO budget, but we sell see examples of the others across the board. And so I think in terms of how this evolves from here, the key thing for us is just where does responsibility lie for turning your customers into the best versions of themselves, for strengthening relationships and for really coordinating those experiences? And I think there’s going to be, we’re going to keep on enhancing their productivity certainly, but that vision of really having the marketer ascend into the role of the strategic, strategic conductor and the composer of those strategies. You know, I think that the value of having, having human ingenuity, creativity and judgment and attachment to the business strategies in the loop in that is going to persist, you know, in ad infinitum. So
Bill Magnuson (Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer)
Yeah. Thank you, everyone, for joining the call today. We appreciate your continued interest in Braze and your support, and we are looking forward to speaking you soon. Cheers.
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