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Wag! (ticker: WAG), the pet care services provider, reported a robust financial performance in its fourth quarter of 2023, with a 27% year-over-year revenue increase to $21.7 million. The company’s earnings call, led by CEO Garrett Smallwood, revealed a focus on sustainable growth and profitability, with adjusted EBITDA reaching breakeven, marking a significant improvement from the previous year’s loss. Wag! has set ambitious goals for the coming years, including a revenue target of over $200 million by 2027 and maintaining a minimum of 25% annual growth.
Key Takeaways
- Q4 2023 revenue increased by 27% YoY to $21.7 million.
- Adjusted EBITDA was breakeven, compared to a $0.4 million loss in the same period last year.
- Wag! achieved adjusted EBITDA profitability for three consecutive quarters in 2023.
- The company aims for over $200 million in revenue by 2027 with at least 25% YoY growth.
- Strategic moves in 2023 included acquisitions and expansion in pet food, treats, and wellness.
- Wag! plans to focus on profitable revenue growth and becoming a premium wellness partner.
- The company expects 2024 revenues between $105 million and $115 million, and adjusted EBITDA between $2 million and $6 million.
- A debt paydown of up to $10 million is planned for 2024.
Company Outlook
- Wag! is prioritizing best-in-class technology, platform expansion, M&A, and operational efficiency for future growth.
- The company forecasts a compound annual growth rate of 25% from 2024 to 2027.
Bearish Highlights
- The services segment is experiencing slower growth due to delayed return-to-office trends, but a gradual improvement is expected by the end of 2024.
Bullish Highlights
- Demand for premium pet products is growing, with an 8-9% CAGR expected.
- The company is confident in its business strategy and the growth of all three business segments.
Misses
- While the company has achieved record revenues, it acknowledges the additional costs of being a public company, which impact EBITDA margins.
Q&A Highlights
- Pet caregivers on Wag!’s platform set their own rates; the company doesn’t plan to change service pricing.
- Subscription products and new launches will focus on convenience and simplicity for premium pet parents.
- The Bright Horizons (NYSE:) deal is a long-term initiative, expected to roll out in the latter half of 2024 or in 2025.
- The company plans to reinvest profits into growth throughout 2024.
- Seasonality affects the business, with Q1 and Q3 typically seeing more activity.
Wag! concluded its earnings call with CEO Garrett Smallwood expressing enthusiasm for the company’s prospects in 2024 and inviting call participants to review an updated management presentation on their website. Despite the challenges of being a public company, Wag! remains committed to investing in long-term growth and capitalizing on the increasing demand for premium pet products and services.
InvestingPro Insights
Wag! (ticker: WAG) has demonstrated a solid commitment to growth and profitability, as reflected in their latest financial performance. Here are some InvestingPro Insights to consider when evaluating the company’s position and potential:
- Market Cap (Adjusted): Wag! currently has a market capitalization of $80.45 million, which indicates its size relative to other companies in the pet care industry.
- Revenue Growth: The company has shown a remarkable year-over-year revenue growth of 72.82% as of the last twelve months ending Q3 2023, aligning with its ambitious revenue target of over $200 million by 2027.
- Gross Profit Margin: With a gross profit margin of 79.67% in the same period, Wag! maintains an impressive level of profitability in its operations, supporting its strategy for sustainable growth.
InvestingPro Tips suggest analysts are optimistic about Wag!’s sales growth in the current year, which could bolster investor confidence. Additionally, the company’s noteworthy gross profit margins are indicative of its ability to manage costs effectively while scaling its operations.
For investors interested in a deeper dive into Wag!’s financials and future prospects, InvestingPro offers additional tips and insights. Currently, there are 12 more InvestingPro Tips available, providing a comprehensive analysis of Wag!’s performance and potential. To explore these insights, visit: https://www.investing.com/pro/WAG. Remember to use coupon code PRONEWS24 to get an additional 10% off a yearly or biyearly Pro and Pro+ subscription.
Full transcript – CHW Acquisition (PET) Q4 2023:
Operator: Greetings. Welcome to the Wag! Q4 2023 Earnings Conference Call [Operator Instructions]. Please note this conference is being recorded. I will now turn the conference over to your host, Garrett Smallwood, Chief Executive Officer and Chairman. You may begin.
Unidentified Company Representative: Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining the Wag!’s conference call to discuss our fourth quarter and full year 2023 financial results. On the call today are Garrett Smallwood, Chief Executive Officer and Chairman; Adam Storm, President and Chief Product Officer; and Alec Davidian, Chief Financial Officer. Before we get started, please note that today’s comments include forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties and involve factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied by such statements. A discussion of these risks and uncertainties is included in our earnings release today and our filings with the SEC, including our upcoming 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2023. We also remind you that we undertake no obligation to update the information contained on this call. These statements should be considered estimates only and are not a guarantee of future performance. Also, during the call, we present both GAAP and non-GAAP financial measures. Reconciliations to the most directly comparable GAAP financial measures are available in today’s earnings release. These non-GAAP measures are not intended to be a substitute for our GAAP results. Lastly, you can find our earnings release and earnings presentation posted on the Investor Relations page of our website. And with that, I’ll now turn the call over to Garrett Smallwood.
Garrett Smallwood: Good afternoon. And thank you for joining us today to discuss our financial performance for the fourth quarter and full year 2023 and provide guidance for fiscal year 2024. First, I will provide a brief overview of our financial results for the fourth quarter and discuss our 2024 plans. Following that, Adam, our President and Chief Product Officer, will share updates on our strategic plans and key initiatives for 2024 and beyond. Then Alec, our Chief Financial Officer, will provide a more detailed analysis of our fourth quarter and full year 2023 results, discuss our capital allocation priorities and share our 2024 guidance. We are excited to announce another successful quarter for the Wag! team, in line with our expectations for revenue and adjusted EBITDA, which resulted in the high end of our range for fiscal year 2023 for revenue and midpoint of our range for adjusted EBITDA. During the quarter, revenue grew 27% year-over-year to $21.7 million, which was a new quarterly record. This growth was driven by the success of our wellness business, fueled by pet parent demand for pet insurance and wellness products. In addition, we are seeing early signs of success with Maxbone within services, which validates our longer term growth initiatives by expanding our reach within retailers to the premium product category. Our adjusted EBITDA was breakeven, an increase from a loss of $0.4 million in the same period last year. As we navigated the dynamic macroeconomic landscape, our primary objectives center around achieving a sustainable equilibrium between growth, profit and margin. In the fourth quarter, platform participants increased to $600,000, an increase of 38% year-over-year, and Wag! Premium penetration remained above our 50% target. To summarize 2023, this was a year of operational efficiency as we demonstrated adjusted EBITDA profitability for three consecutive quarters, reaching fiscal year adjusted EBITDA profitability significantly ahead of schedule. We did this while growing revenues 53% year-over-year and reinvesting in the platform. A few highlights for the year include entering the pet food and treats category with our acquisition of Dog Food Advisor and the launch of Cat Food Advisor, deepening our offerings in the wellness category with our exclusive offering at Paw Protect, the only pet insurance product offering Instant Pay in the US and entering the premium pet essential category with the acquisition of Maxbone. We couldn’t be more excited about the proprietary technology, breadth of our platform and deep relationships we have with premium households as we enter into 2024. In 2024 and beyond, we are focused on profitable revenue growth and reaching more US households as the all encompassing trusted partner for premium wellness, service and products. We will do this by reinvesting free cash flow into growth, which we expect to achieve in the back half of 2024. We believe we are in the early innings of a secular growth trend in the premium wellness, service and product categories in which we operate. We are nearly overwhelmed with the opportunities ahead of us and the resilience and strength of the premium households we service who are showing no signs of slowing down. Accordingly, we are eager to build, innovate and acquire in order to expand the Wag! platform and deliver for our customers. As of today, we are setting a path to reach more than $200 million in revenue by fiscal year 2027, which quantifies the clear demand for our platform. This translates into year-over-year profitable growth of at least 25% for the next four years. We will do this while maintaining disciplined head count growth through the use of AI and process automation. In summary, the team at Wag! continues to execute against our goals and deliver strong and sustainable growth. Our fourth quarter and full year results demonstrate our ability to scale our platform faster and more profitably than anticipated and show the effectiveness of our strategy and business model to become the number one platform for premium US households. Our 2024 guidance, which Alec will outline shortly, demonstrates our commitment to durable year-over-year profitable revenue growth. And with that, I will turn the call over to Adam to review our strategy for 2024.
Adam Storm: Thanks, Garrett. I’m excited to share the three top level elements of our strategy to drive long term shareholder value and profitable growth in 2024 and beyond. One, best-in-class technology. As a technology company, we are excited to continue building proprietary solutions to capture the hearts and minds of our customers. We will leverage our technology and best-in-class user experience to innovate on comparison tools for wellness products, matchmaking services for a highly fragmented pet services landscape and white label solutions for premium partners, Tractor Supply (NASDAQ:), Forbes and Bright Horizons. These proprietary partnerships develop a unique and defensible moat in combination with our offerings that make Wag! a leader in the market. Two, platform expansion and M&A. As evidenced by our successful acquisitions and seamless integrations of Dog Food Advisor, Maxbone and Furmacy, we’ll continue to pursue opportunities to expand the scope of our offerings for our customers. Our technology first DNA allows us to move swiftly both on the buy and the integration, increasing the return profile of the deal and delivering value for the end customer. We are excited to announce another incredible opportunity in WoofWoofTV, one of the largest social media platforms for pet lovers, which we closed in Q4 2023. WoofWoofTV expands our reach with pet lovers with more than 18 million followers across Facebook (NASDAQ:), Instagram, TikTok and more. WoofWoofTV provides a unique media asset that enables Wag! to develop proprietary content for Wag! owned brands and partner brands. Don’t hesitate to give them a follow on Instagram or a like on Facebook. Three, operational efficiency. We believe a hallmark pillar of a successful technology company is the ability to scale revenue without a corresponding increase in headcount. In 2023, we achieved a record $1 million in revenue per employee, which we expect to increase in 2024 and beyond. This was accomplished through intense focus on automation, proprietary marketplace technology that does not require significant customer service or sales head count and the inherent scalability of our digital products. As Garrett alluded to, 2023 was our year of efficiency. 2024 will set the foundation for consistent and repeatable growth for this year and beyond. This growth will be achieved by doubling down on our best-in-class technology, broad and accessible platform, seamless M&A and intense focus on operational efficiency. I will now turn the call over to Alec to discuss our fourth quarter and full year financials and 2024 forecast in more detail.
Alec Davidian: Thanks, Adam. We have previously described 2023 as our year of efficiency and optimizing the business for future success, which we continue to define as consistent profitable growth. While executing to this we have finished 2023 and Q4 strong, which are as follows. For the full year 2023, we generated record revenues of $83.9 million, which represents 53% year-over-year growth and is at the top end of our guidance range, record adjusted EBITDA of $0.7 million representing the midpoint of our guidance range and filing record platform participants with Q4 totaling 600,000 platform participants, representing 38% growth from a year ago. The meaningful growth of these three key metrics as compared to last year demonstrate the strength of our business model, strategy and execution. For Q4, revenue was $21.7 million, a Q4 quarterly record, representing 27% year-over-year growth. Adjusted EBITDA breakevenm I will note this was slightly lower than our prior guidance, which is a result of post holiday demand in conjunction with the fact we saw significant opportunity to lean into sales and marketing in the back half of Q4, primarily in December. The opportunity was too great to not deploy capital and take advantage of the surge in consumer demand, which we expect to be recognized in Q1 2024. Delving deeper into the financial results, revenue category results were as follows. Full year services was $24.4 million, growing 12% year-over-year. Wellness was $52.9 million, growing 60% year-over-year and pet food and treats was $6.6 million. Services in 2023 include a nominal amount of e-commerce revenue from the award winning portfolio of products on maxbone.com. Looking at the fourth quarter specifically, services was $6.3 million, growing 7% from a year ago, driven by favorable sitting and boarding mix uptick. Wellness was $13.5 million, growing 21% from a year ago, driven by a strong pet insurance and wellness plan demand. And finally, pet food and treats was $1.9 million. As a reminder, pet food and treats is a new revenue category we entered into at the start of 2023, encompassing Dog Food Advisor and Cat Food Advisor, which has grown 40% from Q1 to Q4. Our expenses analyzed as a percentage of revenue illustrate operational excellence and scaling and are as follows. For the full year 2023 cost of revenue, excluding depreciation and amortization, totaled $5.5 million, representing 7% of revenue, consistent with last year. In the fourth quarter, cost of revenue totaled $1.8 million, representing 8% of revenue, up from 6% a year ago. The incremental costs in 2023 were driven by Maxbone product and wellness related costs. Full year 2023 platform operations and support expense totaled $12.5 million, representing 15% of revenue versus 25% last year. In the fourth quarter, platform operations and support expense totaled $2.8 million, representing 13% of revenue, down from 16% a year ago. The 10% absolute percentage point decrease year-over-year was achieved through the deployment of our highly official processes, automation and software tools throughout 2023. For the full year, 2023 sales and marketing expense totaled $50.5 million, representing 60% of revenue, down from 64% last year. In the fourth quarter, sales and marketing expense totaled $13.7 million, representing 63% of revenue compared to 62% a year ago. As mentioned earlier, we experienced record consumer demand post holidays and deployed capital thoughtfully to take advantage of the opportunity. Full year G&A expense totaled $19.2 million, representing 23% of revenue, down from 59% last year, which did include onetime costs of going public. Fourth quarter G&A expense totaled $4.7 million, representing 22% of revenue, down from 23% a year ago. This is the outcome of revenue scale, operating leverage and hiring discipline. From a balance sheet perspective, we ended the year with $28.3 million in cash, cash equivalents and accounts receivable. This balance also reflects full cash payment of $1.25 million for WoofWoofTV that closed in December. Becoming adjusted EBITDA positive in the second half of 2023 has significantly reduced cash burn compared to last year. Now looking ahead to our 2024 guidance and longer term outlook, we expect to generate the following; revenues of $105 million to $115 million in 2024, which represents growth of 25% to 37% over 2023; adjusted EBITDA in the range of $2 million to $6 million, representing 177% to 731% over 2023. This guide anticipates 2% to 5% adjusted EBITDA margin together with positive free cash flow in the second half of 2024. Additionally, on the heels of a strong 2023 and expectations for 2024, we are also announcing that our Board of Directors has authorized a debt paydown of up to $10 million of principal in 2024. If the full $10 million paydown is executed, it would result in $1.6 million of cash interest payment savings on an annual basis, which directly contributes to free cash flow. Looking beyond 2024, we expect an average of 25% compound revenue growth for the time periods of 2024 through 2027 assuming no meaningful change in the macroeconomic environment with the expectation of driving towards over $200 million in 2027. In summary, our strong fourth quarter and annual results illustrate; firstly, the strong demand and tailwinds within the pet category, which according to Morgan Stanley is set to grow at a CAGR of 8% over 2022 to 2030, reaching a projected total of [$277 billion]; secondly, management’s ability to execute and drive disciplined growth, which we have achieved for seven consecutive quarters; and thirdly, confidence in the next stage of Wag!’s journey as a profitable growth company in 2024 and beyond, which we have outlined here today. And with that, we now open Q&A. Operator, can you kindly open it up for Q&A.
Operator: [Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from the line of Jeremy Hamblin with Craig-Hallum Capital Group.
Jeremy Hamblin: I wanted to start with just asking a little more detail on your FY24 revenue guidance. So it implies a 25% to 37% year-over-year growth. And included within that, what’s the organic growth rate that’s embedded within there? And that’s part one. And then part two is on the EBITDA portion, of the deals that you’ve done, whether it’s WoofWoof or Maxbone, what is the EBITDA contribution from acquiring those platforms that’s embedded within that guidance in terms — my assumption would be that they are going to be a drag on EBITDA. But any clarification would be super helpful.
Garrett Smallwood: So I think there are two questions. Let me make sure I get them right. So in terms of our fiscal year 2024 guidance on revenue of $105 million to $115 million, that is entirely organic, it does not assume any M&A-related growth. The second question related to EBITDA of businesses that we have acquired and integrated to the Wag! Platform, just taking a step back. Generally, we look at businesses that are highly efficient and have the ability to cross sell or upsell into our existing customer base as part of our kind of M&A thesis. These businesses should not be a drag coefficient on the business, they also won’t be kind of at scale. Frankly, that’s why we acquired them. So I think about them as kind of a neutral effect on both revenue and EBIT. Hope I answered both your questions, Jeremy.
Jeremy Hamblin: And then just in terms of one of the things that has been a bit tricky here as we start 2024, weather has had an impact across the country, particularly in January, whether it was kind of storms, freezing temperatures, first few weeks of January, we’ve also had some torrential rains on the West Coast where you guys have some exposure. I wanted to just get a sense for how that might be impacting your business? And then kind of related to that platform participation, the number of participants that you’re seeing here in Q1 and kind of the typical — a reminder just of the typical seasonality that we should expect?
Garrett Smallwood: Just two questions. One, how has kind of weather impacted the business. Taking a step back again, we are very fortunate to have an incredibly diverse platform business at this point. As a reminder, pet parents and households count us for anything from pet food advice to pet treat advice, to purchasing the right insurance or wellness plan in addition to daytime and overnight services. So there’s certainly been some impact of weather, nothing outside of normal, and I think it’s already kind of baked in. One thing I’d add there, Jeremy, is January, I think some of our kind of strongest start to the year in the history of the business. So we are not seeing a slowdown in the consumer that we service, which is generally the premium household. I think your second question was around seasonality. Generally, I would expect 2024 to trend similar to 2023 in terms of quarter-over-quarter growth and kind of mix of revenue contribution by different parts of the business. Q1, Q3 versus Q2, Q4 as a function of adoptions and weather and summer and everything else should stay consistent.
Jeremy Hamblin: And then in terms of the comment, particularly to the strongest start that you’ve ever seen. Is that being driven, like which segment are you seeing that, is it across all three of your segments, whether it’s services bookings or food and treats? Or is that being driven more by wellness and kind of pet adoption maybe being higher than expected?
Garrett Smallwood: I certainly think that one is right. I think we’ve seen, just from a macro perspective, more adoptions, more premium adoptions. Those premium pet owners need things like premium pet food, early pet insurance, early wellness plans and are starting to think about services. As a reminder, kind of 12, 18 weeks, a little bit early for dog walks, they might be meeting a walker for the first time or considering an overnight, but it’s not yet a current priority. It’s probably more of a Q2, Q3 thing, once you’ve adopted your pet. But I would generally say the strength, mostly in pet food, treats, insurance, wellness and health.
Jeremy Hamblin: And then last one for me and I’ll hop out of the queue. But in terms of the cost of revenues, right, and that’s obviously going to change from what your prior business model look like kind of pre-food and treats business. But how do we think about scaling that portion of your financial model as you guys move forward? I mean I think like your platform operations and support has been pretty remarkable and that was basically flat year-over-year on revenue growth that was up high 20s on a percent. But you’re obviously going to see your COGS move higher as you have that food and treat business. But just a sense for what you’re expecting on that? And then kind of within the component of your projected growth for this year, what is coming from the food and treats piece of your business?
Alec Davidian: I’ll take the cost of revenue. So it was 7% in ’23, I’d expect it to be consistent in ’24, that’s going to be a function, because they’re a function of payment processing fees and background checks, which increase with revenue volume. There will be some scaling, it could come down to 6% as the business does scale, but it will be in that 6% to 7% region.
Garrett Smallwood: And then, Jeremy, on the second question in terms of pet food and treat contribution overall, we really like that category, we really like the space. I think you’ll see us continue to lean in there. I want it to grow — what was 2023 growth for that business?
Alec Davidian: From Q1 to Q4, it grew [40%]…
Garrett Smallwood: That’s great. So I think we’re continuing that, Jeremy. I think generally, the revenue mix in ’24 will look something like the revenue mix in ’23, just broadly.
Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Jason Helfstein with Oppenheimer.
Unidentified Analyst: This is Steve on for Jason. So we just have two questions. First off, how do you see the revenue mix when you reach that $200 million in revenue guidance for ’27? And then secondly, how do you think about pricing or fee increases this year, if any?
Garrett Smallwood: 2027 revenue mix, I think we have a lot of confidence in all parts of the business, Steve. I certainly think we’ll take advantage of the tailwinds we’re seeing in the premium pet parent certainly seems to be leaning into healthy pet food and treats things like CBD, joint medicine, supplements, et cetera, as well as insurance. I think insurance rates went from 3% to 7% and expect it to grow at 8% to 9% CAGR. So I think those will be the two current tailwinds I would call out. Not to say services is in a great business isn’t growing nicely. But I think that has certainly been more impacted by the return to office, which has been a little bit slower. So I think we’ll see how 2027 plays out as office space resumes, people’s kind of mobility resumes and the premium pet parent continues to stay resilient, but we’re confident in all three parts of the business for what it’s worth. Your second question on pricing, taking 10 steps back, pet caregivers on the Wag! platform set their own rates. So that’s pretty nice in terms of how people manage market equilibrium and supply and demand kind of happens organically, frankly. We don’t think we’ll do too much experimenting with pricing within the actual services being delivered, that’s up related to the pet caregiver. In terms of pricing of things like subscription products, our telehealth product mix or any of our new product launches, I generally think we are very aware that we have a premium pet parent who’s looking for a massive amount of convenience and simplicity in their life and they want to pay up for that. So I think we’ll continue to flex our muscle on benefiting from price resilient as long as we’re delivering the right experience.
Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Matt Koranda with ROTH MKM.
Matt Koranda: Just wanted to clarify on the ’24 guide. It sounded like you said sort of ratable compared to ’23 in terms of mix between services, wellness and food and treats. But just want to give you the opportunity to maybe expound upon relative growth rates between those three categories?
Garrett Smallwood: I mean, in terms of ’23, you saw our wellness group of businesses, which is purchasing pet insurance purchasing loans plans, getting advisement of that, et cetera, grow pretty tremendously. And I think it’s a function of, A, we have a phenomenal product and a phenomenal marketplace; and two, consumer demand, which is kind of unbound frankly. I think we’ll continue to lean aggressively into that business. It’s hyper efficient, it’s a great marketplace, it’s an amazing product experience if you haven’t tried it. Not to say pet food and treatment services growth is less important, but I think you will continue to see us lean very aggressively into wellness and services and pet food and treats will follow.
Matt Koranda: And then just in terms of the, I guess, the pull through to the EBITDA outlook, when you guys talk about sort of the margin improvement that’s expected year-over-year. I guess I would have expected with the level of revenue growth that you’re projecting that you may see a little bit more leverage. Are we reinvesting somewhere in the P&L, maybe just talk about sort of where we’re leaning in? I would imagine sales and marketing is going to be a bigger line item this year. But maybe just talk about the puts and takes around where we’re reinvesting dollars on the P&L in ’24?
Garrett Smallwood: We actually published in our management presentation available on wag.co. Slide 15, which provides kind of an illustrative platform participant growth and consolidated P&L reflective of kind of different examples of quarterly platform participants, both at 1 million and 1.5 million profit participants, along with consistent growth in sales and marketing spend, along with operating expenses. And the flow through is pretty — we believe, pretty compelling. To answer your question, though, we do expect in 2024, just a function of what we’re seeing in the marketplace that we’ll continue to reinvest profits back into growth. I think we’ve seen it in kind of other comps, $200 million to $250 million revenue guiding real EBITDA scale, and I expect similar for us, a little earlier, $150 million to $200 million, but we’re producing a tremendous amount of demand. We have a great product people love and we really want to take advantage of that. So the mandate from us is continue to be really efficient and thoughtful and judicious on managing gross profit and margin, but more growth, I think, in the foreseeable future.
Matt Koranda: And then just last one. You’re projecting second half free cash flow positive, I guess, and then you mentioned some debt paydown plans or authorization for $10 million paid down. Maybe, Alec, if you want to just cover sort of the thought process behind the level of paydown that we’re targeting, if we’re kind of hitting that sustainable projected free cash flow level in the second half, why not pay more down than just save on the higher cost of debt there? Maybe just talk about the rationale there, that would be helpful.
Alec Davidian: So we’re thinking through pay down across the rest of the year. We will most likely stagger it through the year, but it depends on ultimately the level of performance through the different quarters. So you’re quite possibly seeing us paying down a bigger chunk to begin with, to your point, and then as free cash flow hits later in the year, topping up to the remaining amounts.
Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Greg Pendy with Chardan.
Greg Pendy: Just a quick one, I guess, within the guidance and the EBITDA guidance. Can you talk about how you’re thinking about the Bright Horizons deal? Is that something that you’re going to be putting some dollars behind and hopefully, that will gradually roll out? And then also, is that built — where were you thinking in terms of your guidance on that?
Garrett Smallwood: In terms of Bright Horizons, there’s a refresher, Bright Horizons is a public company, ticker BFAM. They offer daycare and child care for I believe ages six months to seven years across the US, phenomenal business from all everything I can understand. And we’ve partnered with them to offer pet care via their distributed kind of employer sponsored channels, and it marks our entrants really in the employer sponsored channel. And so we really like this deal because it unlocks a great audience, think about it as major employers across the US, brands like Salesforce (NYSE:), et cetera. And a great brand in Bright Horizons and we kind of were able to piggyback and provide a great experience to their customers. These things generally have a ramp time, as I think you’re alluding to, it takes time to roll out to an employer and then go out to the employees and then figure out how to actually use it and figuring out how to actually benefit from it and actually put it to work. So it probably is more of a back half ’24, ’25 thing than it is a first half 2024 thing frankly. But it’s not to say we aren’t already seeing some early signs of promise and we’re not really excited about the partnership, but it’s probably more of a back half/2025 win for us as it’s rolled out.
Greg Pendy: And then just one final one. Just on the return to office trends, I think you mentioned that it was a little bit sluggish in the fourth quarter, and you called out boarding on top of it. So just kind of wondering, in the fourth quarter, did you see maybe some of the hybrid workers choosing to work remotely more often given the holidays or just kind of anything notable to kind of call out on that? And how do you think about that in light of the revenue guidance for 2024?
Garrett Smallwood: I think what we saw throughout ’23, frankly, was a really trepidatious employer and employee, meaning like no real push or incentive to go back to the office. I think we generally hovered around 48% to 50% throughout the year across the major markets, and that’s a few days a week. We’re not assuming some massive step change there. We certainly think the macro pressure and the layoffs we’re seeing, especially across larger companies may accelerate the return to office and kind of the dependency then on Wag! daytime services, but we’re not necessarily pinning it in. We really — it wasn’t any sort of step change that year. I think we saw kind of a slower employer than maybe we had originally thought to push people back to office, but didn’t really change the pattern or use cases. I think people still depend on us while they’re stuck in meetings all day, people still depend on us why there out on the weekends. People still depend on why they’re traveling. And then in terms of 2024, I think we might see some level of improvement but I don’t expect to be at the 85%, it probably gets to 55% or 60% by the end of the year, is my guess.
Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Aria Cole with Cole Capital.
Aria Cole: I’m sure when you do a financial analysis, you look at comparisons to other companies. As you well know Rover had been public. When they reached $110 million of sales a number of years ago, they were reporting EBITDA margins of 11%. And if you hit the guidance you’re suggesting over 2024, you’ll be at $110 million in middle range as well, reporting about 4% EBITDA margin. So the question really is, what is different about the mix of your business the two businesses that your margins are going to be lower? Is there some structural reason for why your margins are lower versus theirs because of what you offer, or is it a function of you’re just investing more money in sales and marketing to drive future growth?
Garrett Smallwood: I’m not sure if Rover was a public company when they were doing $110 million. But I can certainly say that when you are a public company, you are burdened by additional costs, which probably takes EBITDA margins down. As a reminder, it is not cheap being public in terms of both headcount, compliance, regulation, and just generally best practices. So I would add that in there. It’s probably actually a multi-percentage point impact to our fully loaded EBIT margin. Second part of that is, I think we’re probably in a different state as we think about future growth. I think we’re really investing in durable long term growth may be a bit differently than maybe they were. The third point I would add is there is a management presentation we published that gets a sense of kind of EBITDA margin scale along with free cash flow scale, which was just published, I think that gives us everyone a better idea kind of how we look as we get to higher platform participant numbers.
Aria Cole: And then just a follow-up question. Just looking at the quarterly seasonality of your business, as you look at 2023 of the year just finished, the number of platform participants actually did not rise between March ’24 and December ’24. But then in 2022, it had more of a sequential quarterly rise during the year. What I’m trying to understand is, going forward, how should we think about the seasonality of your business, is it a business that can grow the number of participants every three months versus the prior three months or is there a real seasonality in the business where the business has the most participants early in the year and it plateaus there?
Garrett Smallwood: Yes, I certainly think that there is some level of seasonality in the business in Q1 and Q3 primarily. Q1, Q3 are in more sitting and boardings occur in the services business, a significant number of pet insurance plans, wellness plans and vet communications happen as a function of new pet adoptions and a few other unique marketplace dynamics. But I would say ’23 is going to look a little bit different than 2024 as we’re really going to be reinvesting in growth in 2024, whereas maybe a little more prudent in ’23 to reach adjusted EBITDA profitability. So we expect quarterly participants to grow year-on-year, maybe not always quarter-on-quarter but certainly year-on-year. Last thing I’ll add Aria is, can you please send me an e-mail with your Rover numbers. The last numbers I have are $97 million in revenue in ’21 at minus $9 million of EBIT. So if you have something different I’d love to see it.
Operator: We have reached the end of the question-and-answer session. I’ll now turn the call back over to Garrett Smallwood for closing remarks.
Garrett Smallwood: Yes. Thank you, everyone, for being here. We’re extremely excited for 2024 and the years to follow. Again, I’ve said this for three or four times now. We have updated our management presentation available at wag.co under Investor. I think it’s under press releases and presentations. Please give it a look. I think it answers the majority of questions you may have as you think about the business, the customers and us as management. And we look forward to keeping in touch and for a great year. Thanks, everyone.
Operator: And this concludes today’s conference and you may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation.
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