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IZEA Worldwide, Inc. (IZEA)·Q1 2025 Earnings Summary

Executive Summary

  • Q1 2025 revenue rose 15% year over year to $8.0 million, with net loss improving to $(0.1) million and EPS of $(0.01); Adjusted EBITDA was nearly breakeven at $(0.1) million .
  • Versus Wall Street consensus, revenue missed ($8.0 million actual vs $9.0 million estimate*) while EPS significantly beat (−$0.01 actual vs −$0.17 estimate*); coverage was thin (1 estimate each)*.
  • Managed Services drove results (99% of revenue), while SaaS revenue fell 76% as the company intentionally paused related marketing during transformation .
  • Operating costs fell sharply: sales & marketing −63% and G&A −22% YoY; total costs and expenses were down 22% YoY, reflecting targeted workforce reductions and lower contractor/professional fees .
  • Capital allocation remains a potential stock catalyst: management announced a modified Dutch auction tender offer up to $8.7 million at $2.30–$2.80 per share, commencing May 16 through June 16, 2025 .

Values retrieved from S&P Global*

What Went Well and What Went Wrong

What Went Well

  • Double-digit revenue growth and near breakeven profitability: “We grew revenue by double-digits, nearly broke even, and generated cash – in one quarter.” – CEO Patrick Venetucci .
  • Cost discipline: expenses ex-COGS declined ~40%, with sales & marketing −63% and G&A −22%, materially improving the P&L leverage .
  • Strong cash and liquidity with no debt, plus backlog: cash, cash equivalents, and investments increased to $52.2 million, and managed services backlog stood at $14.9 million .

What Went Wrong

  • Revenue missed consensus despite YoY growth: $8.0 million actual vs $9.0 million estimate*, driven by SaaS down 76% and lower managed services bookings YoY .
  • Demand indicator softness: managed services bookings declined to $7.5 million vs $9.3 million in prior-year Q1, partly due to contract timing from a large customer .
  • Ongoing transformation effects: SaaS marketing pause and mix shifts weighed on top-line momentum, and near-term visibility remains dependent on bookings conversion cycles (6–7.5 months) .

Values retrieved from S&P Global*

Financial Results

Core P&L comparison

MetricQ1 2024Q4 2024Q1 2025
Revenue ($USD)$6,952,883 $11,002,517 $7,968,363
Net Loss ($USD)$(3,265,850) $(4,623,264) $(142,800)
EPS ($/share)$(0.20) $(0.27) $(0.01)
Loss from Operations ($USD)$(4,058,655) $(3,178,753) $(655,852)
Adjusted EBITDA ($USD)$(3,421,661) $(1,474,139) $(76,850)

Cost and margin components

MetricQ1 2024Q4 2024Q1 2025
Cost of Revenue ($USD)$3,967,975 $6,848,525 $4,401,574
Cost of Revenue (% of Revenue)57% 62.2% 55%
Sales & Marketing ($USD)$3,056,291 $2,982,476 $1,121,782
General & Administrative ($USD)$3,783,086 $3,747,136 $2,940,507

Segment breakdown – Revenue by type

MetricQ1 2024Q1 2025
Managed Services – Core Ops ($USD)$6,199,226 $7,907,410
Managed Services – Hoozu ($USD)$497,316
Total Managed Services ($USD)$6,696,542 $7,907,410
SaaS Services ($USD)$256,341 $60,953
Total Revenue ($USD)$6,952,883 $7,968,363

KPIs and balance sheet

KPIQ3 2024Q4 2024Q1 2025
Managed Services Bookings ($USD)$7.9 million $11.7 million $7.5 million
Managed Services Backlog ($USD)$14.9 million
Cash, Cash Equivalents & Investments ($USD)$54.4 million $51.1 million $52.2 million
DebtNone None None

Versus Estimates (Q1 2025)

MetricActualConsensus*Surprise
Revenue ($USD)$7,968,363 $9,000,000*Miss: −$1,031,637 / −11%
EPS ($/share)$(0.01) $(0.17)*Beat: +$0.16

Values retrieved from S&P Global*

Guidance Changes

MetricPeriodPrevious GuidanceCurrent GuidanceChange
RevenueFY 2025None providedNone providedMaintained: no formal guidance
Gross MarginFY 2025None provided“Stable within a range” (qualitative) N/A
OpExFY 2025None providedStructural reductions in place; selective hiring later in year N/A
Capital AllocationQ2 2025$10M buyback authorization ongoing Modified Dutch auction up to $8.7M at $2.30–$2.80, May 16–Jun 16, 2025 Formalized tender offer

Earnings Call Themes & Trends

TopicPrevious Mentions (Q3 2024)Previous Mentions (Q4 2024)Current Period (Q1 2025)Trend
AI/Technology initiativesLaunched IZZY AI assistant; awards for tech products Tech model cited as part of transformation Released enhancements to improve campaign management efficiency Continued focus; execution momentum
Cost structure/transformationElevated expenses due to severance and transition costs Targeted reductions saving ~$5.1M annually; restructuring activated OpEx down sharply; sales & marketing −63%, G&A −22% Cost takeout flowing through P&L
Macro/advertising environmentPipeline quality improving; larger enterprise deal sizes; influencer marketing seen as agile spend amid uncertainty Constructive demand tone despite macro noise
Geographic strategyExited international markets; focus on U.S. to reduce geopolitical/tariff/currency risks De-risking and focus
Capital allocationInitiated $10M buyback; early purchases Continued buybacks; $1.0M through 3/25/25 Announced modified Dutch auction up to $8.7M More assertive return of capital
Product mix (Managed Services vs SaaS)Managed Services up; SaaS up 260% YoY Managed Services strong; SaaS steady Managed Services 99% of revenue; SaaS −76% as marketing paused Emphasis on services; SaaS deprioritized near term

Management Commentary

  • “Q1 was an exceptional quarter… We grew revenue by double-digits, nearly broke even, and generated cash… strong evidence that the transformational changes we made in Q4 2024 are working.” – CEO Patrick Venetucci .
  • “Managed services revenue from continuing operations rose 27.6%… expenses other than cost of revenue declined 40%… adjusted EBITDA was negative $76,850.” – CFO Peter Biere .
  • “Margins will be stable through the rest of the year within a range… cost structure you’re looking at is probably pretty good.” – CFO Peter Biere .
  • “We are optimistic… plan to initiate a tender offer on Friday, May 16, 2025, to encourage completion of our repurchase goal.” – CEO Patrick Venetucci .

Q&A Highlights

  • Gross margin trajectory: CFO expects margins to remain “stable… within a range” through the year; low-margin activities were cleared in prior periods .
  • Cost structure durability: Structural reductions implemented; selective hiring expected as revenue scales, aiming to maintain profitability focus .
  • Demand/pipeline quality: Despite macro uncertainty, pipeline grew in quality and size, with enterprise engagements increasing; influencer spend seen as flexible and agile vs alternatives .
  • M&A strategy: Organization readiness prioritized; opportunistic evaluation underway; valuations vary by segment; disciplined approach to avoid overpaying; company views its shares as undervalued .
  • Capital returns: Modified Dutch auction announced to complete buyback program amid low trading volumes and purchase restrictions .

Estimates Context

  • Revenue missed consensus ($8.0 million actual vs $9.0 million estimate*), reflecting SaaS pullback and lower YoY bookings, though bookings cycles average 6–7.5 months before full revenue recognition .
  • EPS beat by $0.16 (−$0.01 actual vs −$0.17 estimate*), driven by substantial cost reductions and near-breakeven operating results .
  • Coverage remains limited (1 estimate each), increasing the potential for future estimate dispersion; analysts may raise EPS forecasts given operating leverage, while trimming near-term revenue forecasts pending bookings conversion.

Values retrieved from S&P Global*

Key Takeaways for Investors

  • Operating leverage inflecting: sharp OpEx reductions and near-breakeven Adjusted EBITDA suggest improved earnings power as bookings convert .
  • Services-led narrative: Managed Services now ~99% of revenue; expect revenue trajectory to hinge on bookings conversion timing and mix .
  • SaaS near-term headwind is intentional: marketing pause reduced SaaS revenue by 76%; reacceleration depends on future capital allocation decisions .
  • Demand indicators mixed: backlog healthy at $14.9 million, but bookings down YoY to $7.5 million; watch sequential bookings and pipeline quality in Q2/Q3 .
  • Margin stability: CFO sees margins stable; focus on higher-quality, higher-margin work should support gross margin resilience .
  • Capital return catalyst: Dutch auction for up to $8.7 million provides near-term support and could tighten float, potentially improving trading dynamics .
  • Risk monitor: Macro ad budgets and contract timing remain key variables; with limited analyst coverage, estimate volatility may persist*.

Values retrieved from S&P Global*