DoubleVerify - Q1 2023
May 10, 2023
Transcript
Operator (participant)
Greetings. Welcome to DoubleVerify's first quarter 2023 financial results conference call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A question and answer session will follow the formal presentation. If anyone should require operator assistance during the conference, please press star zero on your telephone keypad. Please note this conference is being recorded. I will now turn the conference over to Tejal Engman, Investor Relations. Thank you. You may begin.
Tejal Engman (SVP of Investor Relations)
Good afternoon, welcome to DoubleVerify's first quarter 2023 earnings conference call. With us today are Mark Zagorski, CEO, and Nicola Allais, CFO. Today's press release and this call may contain forward-looking statements that are subject to inherent risks, uncertainties, and changes and reflect our current expectations and information currently available to us, and our actual results could differ materially. For more information, please refer to the risk factors in our recent SEC filings, including our Form 10-Q and our annual report or Form 10-K.
In addition, our discussion today will include references to certain supplemental non-GAAP financial measures and should be considered in addition to and not as a substitute for our GAAP results. Reconciliations to the most comparable GAAP measures available in today's earnings press release, which is available on our investor relations website at ir.doubleverify.com.
During the call today, we'll be referring to the slide deck posted on our website. With that, I'll turn it over to Mark.
Mark Zagorski (CEO)
Thanks, Tejal, and thank you all for joining us today. I'm excited to discuss our strong first quarter performance and optimistic outlook for the rest of the year. We started 2023 laser-focused on a few key areas. First, on launching innovative outcome-driving products anchored in our deep expertise and legacy investments in machine learning and data science. Second, scaling our independently accredited core verification solutions across leading social and CTV platforms. Finally, expanding our partnerships with large advertisers and preeminent digital ad platforms around the globe. On all three fronts, we can confidently state that we are executing ahead of our expectations.
In the face of a challenging macro environment, our performance remains resilient due to the efficacy and utility of our solutions and the deep trust we have built with all of our stakeholders as an unbiased, independent analytics engine committed to making the digital advertising ecosystem stronger, safer, and more secure. This steadfast vision continues to be DV's North Star, core to the value we deliver and proven to generate exceptional ROI for our customers and partners. Our first quarter results exemplify the impact of this commitment when it is embraced and empowered by a passionate group of DV team members in 21 locations around the world. We grew first quarter revenue by 27% year-over-year to $123 million, exceeding the top end of our guidance and significantly outpacing the growth rates of both the digital ad industry and our competitors.
We saw strong, sustained, and broad-based demand for DV solutions, with each of our three business lines delivering double-digit growth. Advertiser demand for both our premium-priced Authentic Brand Suitability programmatic solution and our social measurement solutions continue to grow, resulting in strong business expansion with existing customers and new customer wins. We won numerous RFPs in the first quarter, representing meaningful expansions with existing clients, including Merck adopting DV measurement and ABS in 60 international markets, Airbnb making DV Authentic Ad its measurement currency in multiple LatAm markets, and Amazon Prime Video deploying DV's proprietary pre-campaign activation and post-campaign measurement solutions on YouTube.
On the customer acquisition front, in addition to previously announced Q1 wins, including Air France and Swarovski in EMEA and Mattress Firm in the U.S, we closed additional new logos in the first quarter, including Evoke Health and NewYork-Presbyterian in the U.S, Daikin in APAC, and the Public Investment Fund of Saudi Arabia in the Middle East. Our win rate across all opportunities remained above 80%, with 67% of our first quarter wins being greenfield, which we define as wins where the advertiser wasn't using third-party tools for the business that DV won. This steady rate of greenfield wins exemplifies the under-penetrated TAM that DV continues to benefit from.
These new client wins play into our successful land and expand strategy through which we grew the number of advertiser customers generating more than $200,000 over the last 12 months by 31% in the first quarter. With 45% of our top 700 customers using less than half of our key products in 2022, the opportunity to expand within our existing customer base remains significant. Our acquisition strategy also continues to pay dividends when it comes to client growth. By focusing on M&A that accelerates our product roadmap, adds complementary new technologies, and expands new local market coverage, we create growth opportunities across the DV portfolio and drive measurement currency ubiquity. Since integrating our acquired social activation tools at the beginning of 2022, over 65 new customers have activated DV's pre-campaign social solutions on YouTube and or on Meta.
Newly acquired resources help drive growth across our international measurement customer base, with over 60 new customers activating the DV Authentic Ad in EMEA since the fourth quarter of 2021. DV continues to outpace the industry and gain market share due to three key differentiators. Our rapidly growing scale, our industry-leading innovation, and the deep level of trust we've built with our customers as an unbiased and independent partner. Beginning with innovation, DV's innovation engine is fueled by the unparalleled scale and ubiquity of the data we capture and which is brought to life by the proprietary data science that drives our machine learning technologies. AI and machine learning that powers it have become buzzwords with little explanation of how they drive differentiation and build advantages for the companies that leverage them. Let's discuss how this works for DV.
Head-to-head tests that show that DV's ML-supported pre-bid brand safety and suitability solutions consistently drive greater reductions in post-bid block rates than our competitors' solutions do. We believe this is due to our differentiated and proprietary text and video classification technologies that leverage sophisticated models that have been built and trained over the last decade. The same is true for our fraud verification capabilities. The DV Fraud Lab consists of dedicated data scientists, mathematicians, and analysts from the cyber fraud prevention community who have developed and trained DV's proprietary algorithms, making them incredibly effective at identifying millions of bot and malware devices daily. The growth of AI also may have an interesting impact on the utility and opportunity for our product suite, as an increasing number of advertisers are wrestling with their approach to AI-created content and their comfort with having ads associated with it.
DV currently identifies low-quality content that may be algorithmically generated and is working with clients to determine how we evolve classification to meet their new demands. The data science rigor that powers our AI models is best in class, extending from contextual classification to fraud detection and now to attention. Today, DV offers the industry's most robust cross-platform attention solution, which uses impression-level data, not limited to panels, to measure 50 unique data points related to the exposure and engagement of ad impressions that are first verified as viewable by DV's industry-accredited standards. Last week, we were thrilled to make the leap from attention to action by launching the DV Universal Attention Segment, the industry's first automated attention optimization solution for programmatic media buying.
Powered by DV's global attention data, our pre-bid universal attention segment enables brands to improve performance by optimizing away from low-attention environments without sacrificing scale and reach. Across numerous leading DSPs, any advertiser can activate DV's universal attention segment, including those that use our competitors' measurement solutions, not only creating a fast, long-term activation opportunity, but also unlocking a large measurement upsell opportunity down the road. Speaking of measurement, DV Authentic Attention measurement continues to gain momentum, with 1st quarter test volumes doubling and campaign activations tripling year-over-year. Nearly 80 advertisers have activated DV Authentic Attention campaigns so far in 2023, exceeding the number of advertisers that activated campaigns in all of 2022. Our pioneering work in attention goes beyond thought leadership.
DV has real attention solutions that are at the forefront of driving attention as a currency and generating real results for our customers in market today. Let's move on to one of DV's most successful and important product innovations, Authentic Brand Suitability. Since its release in 2018, we significantly enhanced the value ABS delivers through the release of new performance-driving functionality, including brand suitability tiers, CTV exclusion and inclusion lists, page exception lists, and new content avoidance categories that outstrip any competitive offering. On the heels of our successful price bifurcation for our standard programmatic products in 2022, we've also started to implement a bifurcation of ABS' pricing by introducing a higher rate for ABS video while maintaining the original price for display.
ABS revenue grew 56% year-over-year in the first quarter, driven by a 55% increase in volume and a 1% increase in price. Our ability to raise prices, even on our premium priced products, while continuing to deliver strong volume growth, speaks to the value of our solutions deliver to our customers and the long-term potential for DV to evolve towards a more value-based pricing model, particularly for higher CPM media, such as CTV. On top of these great revenue-generating innovations, DV continues to launch self-service automation tools like Campaign Automator and Pinnacle 2.0, our upgraded client UI, which lower client overhead to employ DV solutions, making it easier than ever to efficiently drive results across a client's full portfolio of brands. With our next differentiator, scale, let me begin with social measurement, which delivered 33% year-over-year volume growth in the first quarter.
Our social measurement growth in dollar terms was led by advertisers leveraging our solutions on Meta's platform, which generates almost half of our social measurement revenue, followed by YouTube applications and then DV tools on TikTok. Existing social customers such as Mondelēz and Airbnb expanded their use of DV's social solutions on Meta and YouTube and activated the Authentic Ad on TikTok for the first time. With new logo wins also contributing to the social measurement growth. Our customers are rapidly activating the DV Authentic Ad on TikTok, where we have doubled the number of customers year-over-year and have grown TikTok's first quarter revenue contribution by over 50% compared to the fourth quarter of 2022. In fact, we generated nearly as much TikTok revenue in Q1 as we did in the full year of 2022.
With TikTok supporting their badge measurement partners brand safety and suitability expansion to nearly 45 markets, we are scaling our coverage across key English, Spanish, French and Portuguese speaking markets this year, with a focus on maximizing market coverage for our top advertiser customers. As a badged Meta business partner, we value Meta's ongoing commitment to providing advertisers with transparency through brand suitability controls and verification. We are excited to be expanding our offerings over the coming months and remain in consultation with Meta for brand suitability verification and measurement solutions on the feed, which will complement our viewability and invalid traffic solutions, enabling further expansion of DV's Authentic Ad coverage to an even broader array of consumer engagement.
Turning to CTV scale, we grew CTV measurement volumes by 39% in the first quarter, outpacing the 14% CTV revenue growth expected of the industry in 2023, according to IAB Research. We launched viewability verification and fraud protection coverage on Netflix ad-supported plan, with DV's verification on Netflix now available in 12 markets globally. CTV remains a strong differentiator for DV due to our comprehensive coverage, industry-leading solutions, and proprietary ability to identify CTV fraud. Only DV covers all of the platforms that receive the majority of CTV ad spend, and our industry-leading solutions span all aspects of CTV, from pre-bid avoidance to post-bid blocking and monitoring. Most importantly, we believe that no other company has made as comprehensive as an investment in people, infrastructure and partnerships to ensure that CTV transactions are fraud free.
Let me wrap up on scale with a focus on our international business expansion, where we delivered 26% year-over-year measurement revenue growth in the first quarter, with both the EMEA and APAC regions exhibiting double-digit growth. Since the beginning of 2021, we've nearly doubled our international sales, marketing and client services headcount, including appointing several new country leaders to cultivate local business. With approximately 170 commercial personnel in the EMEA and APAC, and a market growth plan that includes opening five new international markets will expand DV's commercial footprint to 26 locations by year-end. We couldn't be more excited about our prospects outside of North America in the coming years. A great example of the payoff of our increased international investments is the deal we recently closed with the TBS television network in Japan, a news site owned by 28 Japan News Network TV broadcasting companies.
TBS has adopted DV's Publisher Suite, an analytics and automation solution that comprehensively supports ad quality control and revenue analysis for publishers and media companies globally. Our final differentiator is trust, which underpins our relationships with advertisers and platform partners and is core to the value we deliver to the digital advertising ecosystem. DV has a comprehensive suite of accreditations and certifications and has never lost an international accreditation or had one revoked. Our globally recognized tag certifications and MRC accreditations demonstrate DV's commitment to innovation and delivery against the highest possible industry standards. This trust extends to how we approach privacy and data management as well.
DV was recently ranked in the top 1% of over 1,600 data providers scored by Neutronian in their latest transparency ratings report, and has renewed its Neutronian cookieless certification badge, which provides marketers with verification that the certified data provider is future-proofed for the deprecation of third-party cookies. Our concerted action to uncover and publicize sophisticated global fraud schemes that attempt to siphon millions of dollars of ad spend across industry channels cements our position as a trusted partner acting in the best interests of our customers and the industry. Aggressively unearthing fraud is core to DV's mission and the basis upon which any advertising outcome should be measured. Last year, DV's Fraud Lab detected and mitigated dozens of fraud schemes and variants, with new fraud schemes more than doubling over the last two years.
This year, DV uncovered Beat Sting, an audio fraud scheme, and partnered with Roku to expand its watermark technology to uncover many more fraud use cases, including sophisticated user spoofing that creates fake impressions. This was the case with SmokeScreen, a fraud scheme that DV identified that continues to generate more than $300 million ad requests and siphons over $6 million monthly from unprotected advertisers and publishers. Trust isn't only about accreditations or reports, it's about people and relationships. Since the day I joined nearly three years ago, my drive has been to build a powerful, diverse and stable leadership team made up of the most innovative, customer-centric minds in the space.
Our transparent commitment to a clear common goal has allowed us to attract the best talent who become a consistent voice to all of our stakeholders in generating trust across the advertising ecosystem. Driven by a common mission and belief in our long-term vision, our team sticks together, and based on our 95% gross revenue retention rate over the last three years, they are a big factor in why our clients stick with us too. To conclude, we often talk about how scale, innovation, and trust are our three key differentiators. Execution is arguably the most critical to the success of any business. DV continues to win because we execute better, period. Our ability to successfully innovate drives better product performance that helps us win new clients, which in turn provides the data fuel that powers a flywheel that ultimately grows our business.
We are pleased with the strong start to the year and remain laser-focused on growing and realizing our solid pipeline of new and expansionary deals that will further drive our market share and create an even stronger long-term growth trajectory. With that, let me hand the call over to Nicola.
Nicola Allais (CFO)
Thanks, Mark, and good afternoon, everyone. We're pleased to have delivered strong revenue growth and profitability in the 1st quarter. The outperformance relative to our expectations was primarily driven by stronger-than-expected measurement growth, which gives us the confidence to raise our full year 2023 revenue and Adjusted EBITDA guidance. Total revenue grew 27% in Q1 2023 to $123 million, primarily driven by advertiser revenue growth of 28%, which continues to be volume-led. In the first quarter, MTMs were up 25% year-over-year, while MTFs grew 3% year-over-year. Activation revenue continues to be driven by our premium ABS programmatic solution, which is now in its fifth year since launch. ABS delivered 56% revenue growth and comprised 56% of activation revenue, compared to 48% in the prior year period.
As Mark mentioned, ABS volumes were up 55% the ABS 60 was 1% higher as we rolled out bifurcated ABS pricing for display and video impressions, following the implementation of a similar price bifurcation for our standard programmatic products in the first quarter of last year. The ABS price bifurcation was assumed in our original full year 2023 guidance, most of ABS' first quarter growth came from volume expansion by existing customers who continue to deploy this industry-leading solution across additional markets. Turning to measurement, revenue grew 22%, driven by existing customer expansion on social and by the ramp of new enterprise customers that we signed last year. Social measurement growth was led by Meta and by TikTok, which almost achieved its full year 2022 revenue contribution in the first quarter alone.
International growth of 26% in the first quarter outpaced overall measurement growth and now represents 26% of total measurement revenue. Supply-side revenue grew 15%, driven in particular by continued platform revenue growth from Amazon and LinkedIn. Shifting to expenses, cost of revenue increased by approximately $7 million, primarily due to higher costs from revenue sharing arrangements with programmatic partners tied to higher programmatic revenue, and also due to an increase in cloud services costs. Revenue less cost of sales of 80% in Q1 2023 is expected to remain relatively stable for the remainder of the year as we continue to invest in scaling the infrastructure needed to support our growth. First quarter research and development expenses increased due to investments in AI and machine learning engineering resources.
Sales and marketing and G&A expenses combined remained relatively stable year-over-year as our growing scale is driving leverage on these two operating expense lines. Adjusted EBITDA of $36 million in Q1 2023 represented a 29% margin and was ahead of plan due to higher revenue as well as a moderated pace of hiring, which we expect to accelerate in the second quarter. Net operating cash flow was $21 million, primarily driven by higher year-over-year net income and stronger cash collections. We ended the quarter with nearly $286 million in cash on hand and continue to have zero debt outstanding. Turning to guidance, we expect second quarter revenue in the range of $131 million to $135 million, which implies year-over-year growth of 21% at the midpoint.
The sequential growth implied by our revenue guidance reflects a tough comparison with the second quarter of 2022, when large new advertisers significantly ramped their revenue contribution and when the standard programmatic price bifurcation was fully rolled out. We expect second quarter Adjusted EBITDA in the range of $37 million to $39 million, which implies a 29% margin at the midpoint. For the second quarter, we expect stock-based compensation to range between $14 million and $16 million and weighted average diluted shares outstanding to range between 171 million and 173 million shares. For full year 2023 guidance, we expect revenue in the range of $557 million to $569 million, which implies year-over-year growth of 24% at the midpoint.
We expect Adjusted EBITDA in the range of $171 million to $179 million, which implies a 31% margin at the midpoint. We have raised full-year revenue and Adjusted EBITDA guidance due to a stronger first quarter performance and an expectation that the positive business trends, particularly in measurement, will continue.
Mark Zagorski (CEO)
We expect full year Adjusted EBITDA margins of 31% based on the strength in first quarter profitability, while reflecting our plan to continue to invest in hiring engineering and sales talent, enhancing machine learning capabilities, and further building out the IT infrastructure to support our growth. On a sequential basis, we expect the third quarter to represent a little less than 25% of full-year revenue, and we expect third quarter Adjusted EBITDA margins to remain consistent with the second quarter. To close, we delivered a strong first quarter with double-digit revenue growth across all of our business lines and are focused on successfully executing against our plan for the rest of the year. With that, we will open the line for questions. Operator, please go ahead.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. If you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press Star two if you would like to remove your question from the queue. For a participant choosing speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star keys. Our first question is from Michael Graham with Canaccord Genuity. Please proceed.
Michael Graham (Managing Director and Director of Research and Investment Strategy)
Hey, congrats on the, on the strong numbers. I just wanted to focus in on the international measurement growth for a minute because, you know, the last couple of quarters that growth rate had really slowed down and you accelerated to 26% growth this quarter, against a tough comp in Q1 of last year of 40% growth. Yeah, really just wanted to hear a little bit more about how you're achieving, you know, that sort of growth rebound internationally?
Mark Zagorski (CEO)
Thanks, Michael, for the question. you know, we're really pleased with the progress that we've made in the markets outside the U.S. You know, EMEA grew at 23% year-over-year for the quarter, APAC at 31%. I think a lot of that had to do with something we've been talking about for the last few quarters, which was our continued investment in commercial resources outside of the U.S. A commercial reorg, which we started at the beginning of last year, which really started to close up at the end of the year. Those two things gave us a lot of confidence in the fact that we had the right people in the right places outside the U.S., and they had the right mission in front of them.
Because of that, you know, we saw a really strong pipeline coming out of Q4, which we mentioned earlier this year on our first call. That pipeline really came to fruition in Q1. It was a lot of hard work by our teams. It was a lot of investment in people and in planning, and ultimately it turned into just better sales. Better sales, better pipeline, and that pipeline came to bear in Q1 of this year.
Michael Graham (Managing Director and Director of Research and Investment Strategy)
Okay. Thanks for the color, Mark.
Mark Zagorski (CEO)
Got it.
Operator (participant)
Our next question is from Arjun Bhatia with William Blair. Please proceed.
Arjun Bhatia (Partner and Co-Head of Technology Equity Research)
Hey, guys. thanks and congrats on the strong quarter here. I noticed you were optimistic. You raised your full-year guide, obviously, and you called out, I think, optimism on the measurement side of the business. One, can you just talk about what makes you confident in raising guidance for the year? What are you seeing in measurements specifically that's giving you that's making you optimistic on the rest of the year here?
Mark Zagorski (CEO)
Thanks. Thanks for the question, Arjun. You know, we've always said the kind of measurement in the core measurement business was the backbone or the workhorse of the business. A lot of our success there is related to, you know, what I mentioned to the question from Michael, was, you know, investment in sales resources and sales planning and reorganization of that sales team. Those are the guys that go out and close the deals and measurement, as you said, is kind of core to spinning that flywheel, like they say, of upselling into programmatic, upselling into performance solutions. When that base hits, it's great news for us for the year.
I wouldn't totally equate it to, you know, a SaaS business where they get a big chunk of their meet upfront and they know what the year's gonna look like. We know measurement customers, when they buy in, they buy in in stick, and that sticks with their spend throughout the year. You know, I think we've got confidence in the fact that those customers that have come in are measurement customers. Those dollars are not as fluid as activation dollars, which tend to move with programmatic spend. That gives us a, you know, a good amount of confidence that, yeah, we're in the right place, which we need to be to raise the guide for the year. We've got a good basis from which to do so.
Arjun Bhatia (Partner and Co-Head of Technology Equity Research)
Perfect. Thanks, Mark. That's very helpful. I wanted to touch on attention. It seems like that product is starting to get some good traction here. Are we crossing the chasm with that solution? Maybe just would love to hear how you think the pre-bid capabilities that you launched with universal attention might help advance some of the adoption of this attention solution here.
Mark Zagorski (CEO)
Yeah, I think it's a great question. We do talk a lot about attention. I think I don't know if we'd call it a chasm, but let's call it a mountain to climb. You know, we've started making our way up that mountain, and I think we're getting some good traction. You know, we saw two times the volumes of tests year-over-year, two times the volume of revenue in Q1 year-over-year, you know, three times the volume of campaign blueprints and attention. We're getting there, right? The scale is getting there. I think a big part of it, and I think we also mentioned this in our last call, was, you know, we love the value prop of having pre-bid and post-bid work together. We've seen the power of that with our core verification solutions.
We've seen the power of that with ABS working with measurement. I think the ability for us to kind of grow the attention category as a whole, I think, will also benefit from having pre-bid and post-bid working together. You know, I think we always say it's still early days, even though it's been a long period of early days. As the industry catches up with standardization, and those things get locked in, even as competition gets greater, I think, you know, competition is okay in this space because it actually kind of justifies and, you know, the idea that attention matters and attention matters to advertisers. We're gonna see more traction there. We love the introduction of a pre-bid solution. We think that's gonna help kind of drive that optimization cycle.
You know, this is just the beginning for pre-bid on attention. We think there's an evolution of that to an even more powerful solution on the pre-bid side, the same way we evolved standard brand safety and brand suitability into Authentic Brand Suitability, which is, you know, arguably now, still one of our most powerful products. I think we've got a long way to go, but we're taking those steps, you know, one by one. The introduction of really the first scaled optimization pre-bid attention segment out there, is a great step towards that.
Arjun Bhatia (Partner and Co-Head of Technology Equity Research)
All right. Thank you, Mark, and congrats again on the quarter, guys.
Mark Zagorski (CEO)
Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Our next question is from Justin Patterson with KeyBanc Capital Markets. Please proceed.
Justin Patterson (Managing Director)
Great. Thank you. Two questions. I'll do the first and then follow up after. I just wanted to touch on ABS. It's been your biggest solution, five years in launch and now still growing 56%. I think most of that was driven by volume this quarter. Could you just talk about how you see that volume expansion potential from existing customers going forward? Then I'll pause there and go for my follow-up after.
Mark Zagorski (CEO)
Yeah. I think, you know, look, ABS continues to be a real powerhouse for us. As you noted, a majority of the growth that we had from ABS, the revenue growth came from existing customers this quarter. You know, 94 of our top 100 customers are using ABS right now in Q1. What that shows to me is that even with pretty significant penetration in our top 100 customers, to be able to grow at a 56% year-over-year growth rate means ABS works. Clients are using it in more markets. They're using it across more brands. You know, it's still got legs. We continue to lead with our programmatic solutions in many pitches. We continue to have opportunities below the top 100 clients to continue to grow.
you know, we think ABS is gonna continue to drive growth for us even after, as we noted, a price bifurcation, in which we raised the price on video. We saw very little friction from that price increase. It not only shows the utility of the product, but the value that we're creating for advertisers to show that growth.
Justin Patterson (Managing Director)
Great. Thanks. Then for the second question, I wanted to touch on social measurement a bit more. Meta and TikTok almost achieving their 2022 revenue contribution in just the first quarter is very impressive. Would love to hear more about just how you're thinking about social progressing in the year and whether that could actually turn into a channel that brings net new advertisers into the broader DV ecosystem. Thank you.
Nicola Allais (CFO)
Yeah. Justin, I'll take this one. Just to clarify, it is TikTok revenue that achieved all of 2022 revenue in Q1 2023. Meta is a much larger base, and we've had products with Meta for a much longer period of time. You know, your points around social are the right ones. We were very pleased with how strong the uptake is on the TikTok product. It is now already our third-largest social platform. It remains small if you compare it to Meta and YouTube, but it is an indicator that, you know, our products are really resonating in the social channel.
Social was about 38% of our measurement business in the quarter. That was up from where it was last year. I, you know, we feel very strongly that we will continue to see traction on the social walled gardens as we continue to put more products out there and go into new markets.
Mark Zagorski (CEO)
I'll throw one other point there, too, Justin, which is, you know, you mentioned does it have the ability to attract new customers? You know, in Q1, it certainly did because 40% of our revenue growth was from new customers in the quarter, in social measurement growth that is, was from new customers. You know, it was folks like Mars, Paramount, Bumble, Bayer, Conagra, big brands who are activating across social. TikTok is certainly helping on that front because people are moving there. Again, social is a place that we're gonna feel very comfortable, continue to focus on growth there, and we'll continue to invest as well.
Justin Patterson (Managing Director)
Thank you both.
Operator (participant)
Our next question is from Andrew Boone with JMP Securities. Please proceed.
Andrew Boone (Managing Director)
Hi. Thanks for taking my questions. Mark, you took the EBITDA guide up a point, earlier you mentioned the investments that you made last year in international. I guess my question is: Are you now to scale with resources that you can let more upside flow through to EBITDA and profitability? For my second, you guys mentioned 45% of the top 700 clients are using less than half of the key products in 2022. Can you just talk about that upsell cycle? What's left that you guys really wanna push as you think about 2023 and 2024? What do you think is the low-hanging fruit from here on the upsell? Thanks so much.
Mark Zagorski (CEO)
Sure. I'll take the second half of that question and let Nicola take the first half. Anything that says EBITDA, I put to the CFO, he's much better with those numbers. When we look at, you know, the upsell cycle, and you're right, you know, we've got still a pretty decent amount of product upsells to make across the board. You know, we talk about ABS. Although ABS has some pretty high penetration in our top 100 clients, we've still got a lot of room in our next, you know, several hundred to go after. That's always gonna be our first go-to when we look at the upsell cycle, is move anybody who's using standard brand safety or brand suitability to ABS, right? I think that's a big one.
The second one is when we look at social. Social measurement continues to be, you know, a great growth engine for us, but we look at social as a separate category. Just because you're doing measurement for us in the open web or even using programmatic on open web, doesn't mean you're a client that's using us for measurement on social. When we think of, like, the first two things we're gonna walk into a customer to do and we're gonna upsell, it's gonna be ABS and then social. I think we've got room on both of those products as we look at, you know, the potential upsell. We know that they're both great margin drivers for us and great growth drivers for us, particularly in opportunities outside the US.
Nicola Allais (CFO)
Yeah. In terms of EBITDA margins and expectations and, how we, how we think about it for the future of the business, you know, we did have a strong first quarter, around profitability. I think that the numbers that make us feel very strongly that, you know, we have a business that can scale is really where the investments were. We were able to essentially have virtually year-over-year flat on sales and marketing and G&A, and we've spoken about the fact that we've already invested in SG&A in prior years. In a quarter where, for example, you see 26% growth in international, it's not as though we have to invest additional resources to achieve that growth. There is inherent scale coming from those two lines as we become a larger company.
We are continuing to choose to invest in R&D. That is one area where you will see growth in investments year-on-year, that is specifically around data scientists to allow us to go deeper into AI machine learning investments. These are not brand new investments. We've been doing it for many years already, the opportunity there to continue to invest is available to us, and we're gonna do it because it's going to accelerate our product roadmap. It's a long way to say we are choosing to continue to invest. Our EBITDA margin is still very healthy, but we're already seeing the benefits of the scaling of our business in sales and marketing and G&A.
Andrew Boone (Managing Director)
Thank you.
Mark Zagorski (CEO)
Sure.
Operator (participant)
Our next question is from Mark Murphy with JP Morgan. Please proceed.
Mark Murphy (Executive Director)
Thank you so much, and I'll add my congrats. Mark, I wanted to ask you, the win rates remain very high. Can you refresh us on the role of accreditations through that lens, just to help you win business? How wide is the gap today in the accreditations between DoubleVerify, and if we compare that to the number two and number three competitors? Then I have a quick follow-up.
Mark Zagorski (CEO)
I mean, accreditations are definitely part of the matrix of elements that go into the decision process for an advertiser. It's an important one, as is customer service and customer support, as is pricing. Probably still the most important one is the performance of the platform. That's where, you know, we continue to lean in. That's why technology expense is such an important one for us to keep investing in. Because when those platforms go head to head, you know, we've said this, you know, time and again, whichever platform delivers the highest ROI by filtering out the most fraud, by creating the greatest level of brand suitability granularity, is the one that's gonna win. I think that's driving a great win ratio for us.
When it does come to accreditations, when you look at the number across the multiple different organizations that are out there, our best estimate is we're anywhere from 50% more different accreditations to almost double, depending on. It's hard to find them. There's lots of different places where people have accreditations in different countries, we certainly outpace our competitors by a significant amount in that space.
Mark Murphy (Executive Director)
Okay. Then as a quick follow-up, what are you discovering in terms of viewability in the CTV realm? What I mean is, are there fewer issues because in some cases you have much larger screens? Or are you finding that there are more issues because you can encounter buffering or, you know, ad placement problems or, you know, some of the ad skipping capabilities of those platforms?
Mark Zagorski (CEO)
Yeah, it's a great question. I mean, you know, there's always been this assumption that, you know, CTV is 100% viewable, right? It's in someone's living room. How could it not be viewed? You know, very different problems than a banner ad on a webpage where someone can scroll by it or an impression on a mobile phone that gets, you know, pushed by very quickly or shut off. There are still significant issues around viewability. The things that we're tracking are exactly the things, Mark, that you know, which is, does the ad run for the full first quartile, right? Does it run for that period of time that I can actually register it as viewable? Does an ad, most importantly, is it running while the TV is on?
Which is, believe it or not, becoming an increasingly significant issue for advertisers because many apps are not passing the signal that says this television is on. They're actually running ads while the TV is off, either mistakenly because they shouldn't be doing that or on purpose because they're not legitimate apps. Viewability, the way that we measure viewability is a bit different than what you'd think of in the traditional web world, but those issues are continuing to be real issues for advertisers, which is, ads not running the full extent they should, and ads running when a television screen is actually off. The box is on, the system's working, the computer is working that is running that streaming application, but the screen's not on.
Those are issues that continue to be challenging to advertisers, and I think they're just starting to wake up to the fact that this is a real, you know, this is really something that we should start measuring and paying attention to.
Mark Murphy (Executive Director)
Thank you very much.
Mark Zagorski (CEO)
Yeah.
Operator (participant)
Our next question is from Eric Sheridan with Goldman Sachs. Please proceed.
Eric Sheridan (Managing Director)
Thanks so much for taking the questions. Maybe two, if I could. In terms of the stat you gave on increase in number of large advertisers and bringing that back to potentially new logos, are there any industry verticals and/or geos you're calling out when you look at your backlog for new large advertisers or new logos that you think we should be monitoring for potential for outsized growth or areas where the backlog is showing a lot of promise in terms of building not only for 2023 but beyond? The second question would be on Netflix as a platform.
How much of scaling the Netflix business now as we move through 23 and out into the out year is about elements where you need to invest to sort of position you to benefit from what they build over the long term versus just them executing on simply scale of ad-supported customers and subscribers over time, and that's where the revenue unlock is? Thanks so much.
Mark Zagorski (CEO)
Sure. For sure. Your first question, you know, the nice thing about our business which we mentioned, you know, in the past is that we've got a pretty broad-based set of advertisers. If you remember several quarters ago, there were supply chain issues around, you know, auto delivery and electronics delivery. A lot of folks who were focused on those two segments, had some challenges, you know, running ads because there just was no reason to advertise if you couldn't sell the product to get the product in store. We didn't see that because, you know, we're really nicely distributed across all the major ad segments. There's not one in which we could say, you know, we've seen either oversized increase or decrease over the last several quarters.
We've seen growth across all of them, which has been pretty nice. With regard to Netflix, you know, Zoom launched, you know, a few months ago, I think, March. You know, still relatively early, but we're seeing some pretty, you know, decent volumes starting to come across that, and it is having an impact on our CTV volume. We've got, you know, customers like Molson Coors, Nintendo, Santander, Toyota, that are starting to buy across and use verification across Netflix. There's definitely interest. There's definitely dollars starting to flow there. Although it's pretty early for Netflix, you know, it's pretty small, you know, we're gonna be there with them for the ride, which is great. I think it's a nice place for us to be.
We're in 12 markets with them. That'll continue to grow, and we'll continue to grow it.
Operator (participant)
Our next question is from Laura Martin with Needham & Company. Please proceed.
Laura Martin (Managing Director of Senior Internet and Media Analyst)
Hey there, Mark. Great results. My first one is on this 80% new business win you continue to get. My question is, when you go to pitch and then they try you versus your competitor, do you bundle your product so that that hit rate goes up over time? When you do the RFP, does it always start with a single product, so you aren't really benefiting from bundling in these fabulous products that you invest, you know, end up creating later? That it's a great question, Laura. I wish we could bundle everything in on day one and just sell them a big package. The short answer is it definitely varies.
Mark Zagorski (CEO)
You know, there are clients that are looking for single solutions, we're displacing, for example, Moat on a viewability deal or IAS on a brand safety deal. Then we grow from there. It definitely is a bit all over the board, it still lends us to that whole kind of land and expand, right? We wanna get in, get a foot in there, that we can push other solutions across. When we say 80% win ratio, that's, you know, that's could be against a single product, or it could be across a bundle or enterprise deal. You know, it is definitely a mix of different types of wins. In either case, you know, we're looking to sell them all, you know, products across our entire six categories of solutions.
I would say, you know, in a vast majority of them, we're not going in with all six of those categories covered. It's, it's some very small portion of that.
Laura Martin (Managing Director of Senior Internet and Media Analyst)
Super helpful. My second one is, you know the thing I liked best is that you're carrying the video product for ABS. My question on pricing strategy is: What is the business model for attention? Is it a % of media or is it just an add-on to flat fee impressions?
Mark Zagorski (CEO)
Yeah. It's a great question. Right now, attention is set up as a CPM-based product, so it's very much like measurement. It's a measurement solution sold incremental to our verification. So think of it as an add-on to verification. That's at a relatively decent premium to core measurements. So it's a premium-priced add-on to our measurement solution today. Doesn't mean that that model may not change in the future. You know, especially as we start expanding attention into CTV and other places, we, you know, we'll certainly, you know, look at different models that may drive a different type of profile for the solution.
Laura Martin (Managing Director of Senior Internet and Media Analyst)
Fantastic. Thanks very much.
Mark Zagorski (CEO)
You got it.
Operator (participant)
Our next question is from Raimo Lenschow with Barclays. Please proceed.
Speaker 14
Hi, this is Frank on for Raimo. Congrats on another strong quarter today. I wanna stay in those new logo wins. Is the buying decision still more driven by the ROI pitch or have newer products and media begun to move the needle on those RFPs?
Mark Zagorski (CEO)
Great question. I mean, I think ROI is what gets us in the door, right? The newer performance-based solutions are kind of, at this stage, still the icing on the cake, right? I can tell you they do sometimes open that door for us. When we launched, for example, our emissions measurement solutions with Scope3, there was this huge amount of interest, in looking at, you know, the environmental impact of, you know, ad transactions. That created a dialogue, which of course we came in and exploited to kind of, you know, sell additional solutions across the board. But for the most part, you know, folks are usually looking for core solutions. We look to drive new implementations across those core solutions and then supplement them with our performance solutions afterwards.
It's, you know, it definitely varies across the board. As that basket of goods gets bigger, it provides more opportunities to have, you know, conversations with our customers. Each of them has different needs. That's why having, you know, a broad basis of goods, and broad coverage across multiple different types of platforms is so critically important to us because we just wanna have a big net to capture lots of different types of opportunities.
Speaker 14
Very helpful. Thanks, Mark.
Mark Zagorski (CEO)
Got it.
Operator (participant)
Our next question is from Yun Kim with Loop Capital Markets. Please proceed.
Yun Kim (Managing Director)
All right. Thank you. Congrats on a solid quarter, Mark. Just following up on a question about the expansion with existing customers. You know, if you can talk about the current trend that you're seeing for the overall expansion rate for the existing customers, has that been steady or has that shown improvement in recent quarters? You know, also just kind of curious, if you can compare that expansion rate with existing customers, is that more product driven or is that more driven by customers simply increasing their volume and adding more channels?
Mark Zagorski (CEO)
I'm gonna let Nicola talk here.
Nicola Allais (CFO)
Sure. Yun Kim, I'll take it. I'll say the one thing that we've seen that's consistent year-on-year is that this sort of, getting in with a customer and then expanding has continued. What we, what is really at the bottom, at the core, what's driving the expansion is obviously product upsell, but I don't wanna forget geographic expansion. We might start with a client in one region, and then expand with volume in additional regions. While the growth in international that we experienced in this quarter was partly on new wins, there is also an aspect of it which is just geographic expansion for existing customers. The profile of what we're seeing in terms of the expansion is a mix.
It's really new products, new geographies, and obviously as new sectors become available, such as TikTok, then we're able to expand as well. One measure to maybe kind of anchor the answer is the top 200 customers. On the top 200 customers, you know, that number, I'm sorry. On the customers that spent over $200,000 in the last 12 months, that number grew 29% in Q4 and it grew 31% in Q1 2023. You see that the power of the expansion on the dollars that we're getting from those customers.
Yun Kim (Managing Director)
Great. Nicola, I have a follow-up. On the gross margin, was there a new higher revenue sharing arrangement that drove that big sequential uptick? You know, just the overall increase in cloud costs, is that primarily driven by new products that require more cloud resources? Is international mix having any impact on the gross margin? Thanks.
Nicola Allais (CFO)
What is driving the change in gross margin is a higher revenue share, for the activation revenue, but it's not because the actual agreements are changing, it's just that the revenue is back, is getting bigger. It's a higher revenue share just because the revenue is higher, and so it's impacting gross margin from that perspective. In addition to those costs, as we said in our, in our prepared remarks.
Mark Zagorski (CEO)
We are choosing to invest in additional cloud computing resources, which are costs that are impacting the gross margin. This is a decision that we're making this year because we're expecting to see returns in terms of us being able to fuel more growth. It is, it is a, it is a business decision to invest into that line in addition to the fact that activation is now a larger share of our revenue.
Yun Kim (Managing Director)
Awesome. Thank you so much.
Mark Zagorski (CEO)
Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Our next question is from Mark Kelley with Stifel. Please proceed.
Mark Kelley (Managing Director)
Hi. Great. Thank you very much. I wanted to go back to attention really quickly. Just, I wanna get your thoughts, you know, given that there's a bunch of different methodologies that are being worked on, things like eye tracking and, you know, the method that you guys use. Does that kind of extend the timeline for some sort of standardization across the industry? That's the first one. The second one is just on this new AI product that you mentioned. Can you dive into that just a little bit more, I guess, you know, what are the moving pieces, and how much of the current tech that you have can you reuse there? Thank you.
Mark Zagorski (CEO)
It's great question. First let me address the question on, you know, the different types of ways that, you know, folks are trying to build attention metrics. I think, you know, the reality is methodology should not drive standardization. You know, standards are standards. Attention and engagement should be seen as relatively finite metrics that can be consistent no matter how someone determines what attention is. i.e., you know, when someone's measuring reach and frequency, it's 18-year-old male to 34-year-old male is the metric, right? How you found that out is not determinate of what happens at the end. I think the different methodologies shouldn't slow down, you know, the standardization of the standard metrics that people agree to determine how we're gonna measure attention.
A, I think it's they can sometimes be helpful in accelerating the discussion, but at the end of the day, you know, I think the industry's gonna settle on a definition that makes sense no matter what the methodology is. We believe that census and impression-level methodology is the most valid, it's the most robust. As we saw in the, you know, the linear TV measurement world or any other world that uses panels or very small samples, there have to be extrapolated in the wrong ways to be misinterpreted and many times misapplied. You know, ultimately, you know, we do feel that the most robust way of measuring attention has to do with census-level impression by impression measurement.
Doesn't mean it can't be supplemented by other types of panel-based methodology, but ultimately, we think that's the one that's gonna have the highest level of effectiveness and efficiency around there. When it comes to what we mentioned regarding our new pre-bid product, this is the first step, and it's the first baby step into taking attention metrics and launching them into the activation sphere. We know how successful taking a measurement metric like brand suitability or brand safety can be when put into activation, so the ability to filter and optimize and then measure afterwards. You know, it's a first step there, just like our first steps were with standard brand safety, and they evolved into Authentic Brand Suitability, which is a much more fluid, much more dynamic application in the programmatic world.
We think this is kind of the first step in, which will evolve into a much more fluid, much more dynamic, application down the road on the pre-bid side.
Mark Kelley (Managing Director)
Great. Thank you, Mark.
Mark Zagorski (CEO)
Got it.
Operator (participant)
Now our final question is from Youssef Squali with Truist Securities. Please proceed.
Youssef Squali (Managing Director and Head of Internet and Digital Media Research Group)
Great. Thank you very much, and congrats on a solid quarter. One quick question for Mark and one for Nicola. Mark, it was interesting in the press release, you mentioned market share gains across your three business lines. I was just wondering if you could just please remind us of the two or three products you feel or products that you feel you have the most kind of competitive advantage with sustainability of that edge. Nicola, sorry if you mentioned this in your prepared remarks, but can you just remind us what's baked into your guidance in terms of gross margin for Q2 in 2023? Thank you.
Mark Zagorski (CEO)
Great. I'll talk a little bit about, you know, I think where we really excel in our, in our product and our innovation. I think the first is something, you know, again, we continue to talk about, which is ABS. There are imitators, there are other solutions out there that try to do the same thing. No single product out there, we think is comparable to ABS. I think, you know, it shows with the continued legs and growth it has even after, you know, the numerous years it's been in market. To be able to grow at 56% year-over-year in Q1 is, you know, pretty exceptional. I think ABS is a, is an advantage.
It helps us grow market share, it helps us win deals. Obviously it helps drive revenue for the business as well. I think, you know, outside of that, it's our unique basket of goods around the edges. I call them around the edges, but they're not lesser products. Our advantage and attention, I can tell you, just helped us win a major advertiser deal, not because it was gonna be a huge part of what they did, but they loved what we did around attention and said, "This is a differentiator between you guys and others.
We'll take your core solutions, but we're gonna lean into attention down the road." I think our continued ability to innovate around things like attention, around areas like CTV and CTV viewability, where we have really unique viewability solutions and unique solutions that are detecting things like TV off, those are areas which we talk about a lot. They don't generate huge amounts of revenue for us yet, when someone looks at the basket of goods they're buying, they wanna look at a core solution plus innovations around the edges. They really matter and they help us close new deals.
Nicola Allais (CFO)
Yeah. Youssef, on the, on your second question. You know, on the gross margin side, revenue less cost of sales, it was 80% in Q1 and we expect it to remain relatively stable around those levels as we choose to continue to invest in our infrastructure. It's a choice we're making to invest in it.
Youssef Squali (Managing Director and Head of Internet and Digital Media Research Group)
That's helpful. Okay. Thank you.
Operator (participant)
We have reached the end of our question-and-answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Mark for closing comments.
Mark Zagorski (CEO)
Great. Thank you all for the great questions. I'd like to take this time to thank the DV team worldwide for their hard work and commitment to our mission and for delivering another great quarter of results. Also to thank all of our stakeholders, our customers, partners and investors for their continued support. We look forward to seeing many of you at upcoming conferences and events. Have a great evening, everybody.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. This does conclude today's conference. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you again for your participation.