Procore Technologies - Q1 2023
May 3, 2023
Transcript
Operator (participant)
Good afternoon, everyone. I would like to welcome you all to the Procore Technologies Inc Full Year 2023 Q1 Earnings Call. My name is Breeka, and I'll be your event specialist operating today's call. After the speaker's presentation today, we will conduct a question and answer session. To ask a question at this time, please press star then one on your telephone keypad. If you change your mind and would like to withdraw your question, please press star two. If you need operator assistance at any point today, it's star 0. Thank you. I would now like to turn the conference over to Matthew Puljiz. Matthew, please go ahead when you're ready.
Matthew Puljiz (VP of Finance and VP of Investor Relations)
Thanks. Good afternoon, everyone. Welcome to Procore's 2023 first quarter earnings call. I'm Matthew Puljiz, VP of Finance. With me today are Tooey Courtemanche, Founder, President, and CEO, Paul Lyandres, CFO, and Howard Fu, SVP of Finance. Further disclosure of our results can be found in our press release issued today, which is available on the investor relations section of our website, and our periodic reports filed with the SEC. Today's call is being recorded, and a replay will be available following the conclusion of the call. Comments made on this call may include forward-looking statements regarding our financial results, products, customer demand, operations, and macroeconomic and geopolitical conditions. You should not rely on forward-looking statements as predictions of future events. All forward-looking statements are subject to risks, uncertainties, and assumptions, and are based on management's current expectations and views as of today, May 3, 2023.
Procore undertakes no obligation to update any forward-looking statements to reflect new information or unanticipated events except as required by law. If this call is replayed or viewed after today, the information presented during the call may not contain current or accurate information. Therefore, these statements should not be relied upon as representing our views as of any subsequent date. We'll also refer to certain non-GAAP financial measures to provide additional information to investors. A reconciliation of non-GAAP to GAAP measures is provided in our press release. With that, let me hand it to Tooey.
Tooey Courtemanche (Founder, President, and CEO)
Hey, thanks, Matt, and welcome everyone, and thank you for joining us today. I'm gonna begin by expressing my sincere gratitude for the team's hard work to deliver our Q1 results. Let me dive straight in and share a few highlights from the quarter. In Q1, we grew revenue 34% year-over-year, and we added over 600 net new customers, reaching over 15,000 total customers by the end of the quarter. We continued to demonstrate durable growth while improving operating leverage in the business. For the third year in a row, we were named one of G2's best global software companies, reaching our highest ever ranking of number 14 out of 100. This is a testament to the value that our platform continues to deliver to the construction industry.
Over the past 90 days, I have spent a lot of time on the road and had the privilege of meeting with our customers and shareholders all around the globe. Investors often ask me about the broader demand environment, and I continue to stay close to our industry outlets. Our customers continue to share that their backlogs remain healthy and that in many cases, they're busier now than ever, and that the labor shortage is still the biggest challenge in meeting demand. In aggregate, third-party external indices that we watch have remained stable. We did notice a new dynamic surface in Q1. We saw some cautiousness on construction volume commitments for work that hasn't yet been awarded. We saw this within a small portion of our customers that came up for renewal in the quarter.
Let me give you a hypothetical example, which I believe will help illustrate this. Imagine that you're a construction company here in the U.S. You're hearing in the news about a potential recession and difficulty obtaining financing. You're also reading about new government spending, record employment, and on top of that, you have a fully committed project backlog, which means that you have secured work for the future and are not necessarily concerned about the future pipeline of jobs. These mixed signals leave you confused and naturally lead you to be more cautious, just in case your business takes a turn for the worse. This simple scenario illustrates the slight conservatism some of our customers demonstrated in Q1. However, the external uncertainty has not reduced our customers' desire for efficiency or demand for technology.
In fact, we have seen demand drive a return in net new customer adds, and the majority of customers are continuing to grow construction volume with Procore. Paul will elaborate further on these points later. They help illustrate why it's important to take each individual data point in context and to look at all of the internal and external indicators in aggregate to gauge the overall health of the industry. Another nuanced topic investors regularly bring up is the commercial real estate crisis and its impact on office construction. Let me be very clear. We do not believe that this is a notable headwind to our business for two reasons. First, office construction has been muted since 2019 and largely did not contribute to our success over the past two years. Second, office construction represents only a small percentage of the overall industry.
Historically, we've described the construction industry as commercial, infrastructure, and residential. This has created some confusion because folks often mistakenly equate office buildings with commercial construction. I think it's important for me to take a moment to clarify how we view the overall industry. A great place to start is with the U.S. Census Bureau's definition for construction spending. At the highest level, they break down the construction landscape between residential and non-residential. Within non-residential, there are over 70 subcategories across lodging, commercial, healthcare, education, office buildings, public infrastructure, transportation, and much, much more. To give you some perspective, office buildings comprise less than 5% of the total U.S. construction value put in place in 2022. As I've shared before, when demand in one sector wanes, oftentimes demand in other sectors grow.
While some areas within non-residential, like office buildings, have been impacted for a long time, more recently, we have seen healthy growth in other areas, such as manufacturing, education, and data centers. Longer term, we also anticipate seeing further tailwinds from public infrastructure spend. Ultimately, our customers manage diverse portfolios of work, and they will go to where the demand is. This is why when investors ask me about commercial real estate and office construction, my answer is more holistic. It's the aggregate construction volume and overall demand that matters most. While the broader environment continues to evolve in the near term, what is clear is that in times of uncertainty, customers prioritize efficiencies in the construction process, efficiencies that the Procore platform provides. Our focus remains on delivering powerful ROI to our customers with a mission-critical platform that helps them build better, faster, safer, and more efficiently.
Let me share a few examples, starting with a new specialty contractor customer. Tri-City Electric Company of Iowa is one of the oldest and largest electrical contractors in the U.S. They work on a diverse portfolio spanning the industrial, commercial, multifamily, and sports markets. Their legacy solutions lacked the functionality that they required. As a result, their field staff pushed for a change. Upon evaluating Procore, Tri-City Electric estimated that Procore could help them save over 300 hours per week in labor hours through more efficient field-to-office communication, representing a significant value add. Ultimately, they chose Procore to displace their existing systems due to the meaningful ROI we deliver, advanced functionality, and the support from our existing clients. Not only are customers continuing to join Procore, they're expanding with us. W.A.
Richardson is a Las Vegas-based general contractor with a focus on hospitality and entertainment and has built some of the largest projects in the history of Las Vegas. They originally became a Procore customer because of our advanced platform that enabled collaboration and efficiencies across their teams. Over the course of our partnership, they continued to add new product offerings and expand construction volumes, including billions of dollars in construction value for two major hotel casino resorts this quarter. They plan to leverage our continued partnership to secure additional large-scale projects throughout Las Vegas. In addition to general contractors, we continue to expand with owners. You know, I mentioned earlier that data centers are an area within non-residential construction experiencing continued growth. Vantage Data Centers is a leading provider of hyperscale data center campuses around the world.
Over the past five years, they have grown exponentially to become a global operator across North America, EMEA, and Asia-Pacific. Having been a Procore customer in each of these regions, this quarter, they committed all of their construction volume to us globally to manage the execution and financials of their projects. Previously, they've been using project management, quality and safety, and analytics globally and testing out our financials and ERP connector products in each region. As part of this expansion, they are now using financials globally and are actively evaluating additional Procore products. These customer relationships underscore the value our customers are getting from the Procore platform and our ability to help the industry solve its most pressing challenges.
Speaking of which, over the past several quarters, you've heard us talk about our long-term fintech opportunities and how they tie back to our overarching goal of helping our customers manage risk and accelerate growth. In March, we announced the launch of Procore Risk Advisors, one of our fintech initiatives aimed at solving one of the construction industry's biggest challenges and largest upfront costs, insurance. As a reminder, insurance in construction is complicated, cumbersome, and expensive. All stakeholders on a project are contractually obligated to have relevant coverage for each individual project they work on.
Insurance brokerage processes are still highly manual and time-consuming, and insurance carriers lack visibility into new sources of risk data to properly select and price risk, which means construction has one of the most expensive insurance costs as a percentage of the industry's revenues, typically comprising multiple percentage points of a project's budget across all of these stakeholders. This represents a great opportunity for Procore to help solve one of our customers' biggest pain points. Procore Risk Advisors is a modern construction brokerage that offers enhanced insurance and surety solutions. Ultimately, Procore will serve as a broker and in some cases help underwrite a subset of our customers' policies by leveraging our unique risk data. We aim to reward our customers for leveraging our technology and data to mitigate risk by providing them with better insurance pricing and terms.
To be very clear, Procore is not incurring any exposure to insurance claims with this program. We believe that we are uniquely positioned to solve this challenge for a couple of reasons. First, we've developed a trusted brand with over 15,000 customers and millions of users, giving us valuable access to and relationships with the construction industry. Therefore, we have a unique opportunity to expand our platform of solutions, enabling a virtuous cycle of product adoption. What I mean by that is the more product lines and the higher adoption a customer has, the more data they generate that can help them drive insurance savings. Second, our customers generate proprietary data that we can leverage to help them obtain favorable terms, as well as enable us to offer proprietary insurance programs.
This can also help our customers realize direct and tangible value from adopting Procore in the form of insurance savings. Paul is going to share a bit more color on this later, but I want to emphasize that we are in the very early stages of this opportunity, and while it's a long-term initiative, we do look forward to sharing our progress as we continue to evolve and grow this offering. Many of you know that effective next week, Paul is going to be starting a new role at Procore as the President of Fintech, and he will be passing the CFO torch on to Howard. Personally, I want to just take a moment and thank Paul for his tremendous leadership and partnership over the past four years as CFO, helping to scale the business to where we are today.
I am thrilled to continue to partner with him to help unlock further value for our customers in his new role as President of Fintech. I also want to take a moment to welcome Howard as our new CFO, and I look forward to working more closely with him as we continue to scale. To wrap up, we had another quarter of growth on both the top and the bottom line as we continue our journey of efficient growth. Looking ahead, we remain focused on executing on the long-term opportunities in front of us and advancing our mission of connecting everyone in construction on a global platform. I believe our close partnership with the industry, the exceptional team we have in place, and our commitment to solving the biggest challenges in construction will create significant value for our customers and shareholders over the long term.
With that, let me hand it over to Paul.
Paul Lyandres (CFO)
Good afternoon, everyone, thank you, Tooey, for the kind words. As Tooey indicated, today marks my last earnings call as CFO. It has truly been a privilege working with all of you, and I want to thank you for the partnership as I embark on my next chapter at Procore, leading our fintech organization. On to the quarter. Today, I'll quickly recap our results, share some color on our performance, and hand it over to Howard to conclude with our outlook. Revenue in Q1 was $214 million, up 34% year-over-year. Our non-GAAP operating loss was $4 million, representing an operating margin of negative 2%. Our key balance sheet metrics, specifically short-term RPO and short-term deferred revenue, continued growing 30% or greater year-over-year.
Our Q1 performance was well-rounded in that we saw growth across multiple facets of the business. I'd like to take a step back and share some additional color on our performance. First, you may recall back in Q4, we noted a sequential drop in net new customer adds from Q3, primarily driven by higher logo churn within our smallest customers. As we shared, this did not have a material impact on our Q4 financial results, given dollar churn performed as we expected. That said, we wanted to call out that what we saw in Q4 is not yet proving to be a trend, as we saw net new customer adds return to historical lows. Second, as Tooey mentioned, this quarter, we started to see a small portion of our customers exercise some cautiousness in their construction volume commitment.
Although this wasn't apparent in our financial results, in the interest of transparency, we wanted to provide some color on what we saw. We believe this reflects a heightened sense of conservatism within a minority of customers only committing volume for work that has already been awarded. Despite this, we still saw an increase in the share of our customers growing construction volumes within Procore, representing the majority of our customer base. As Howard will explain shortly, our previous and current outlook already factor in the potential for cautious customer sentiment. Third, similar to prior quarters, our Q1 international results were impacted by currency headwinds. On a year-over-year basis, FX contributed approximately eight points of headwind to international revenue growth and one point of headwind to total revenue growth.
Therefore, on a constant currency basis, international revenue grew 35% year-over-year, and total revenue grew 35% year-over-year. Finally, over the past few quarters, you've heard us reference our pursuit of efficient growth and how this is being instilled across the organization as a priority we need to improve upon. This quarter, we saw this mindset manifest in the business. Specifically, our lower expense profile in Q1 was unique as it was a result of relatively smaller savings across numerous areas that in aggregate resulted in meaningful outperformance as compared to our guidance. While this included things like less travel and one-time hosting efficiencies unique to Q1, notably, it did not consist of intentional hiring delays, lower commission expenses, or other reductions typically related to sacrificing top-line objectives. In fact, we actually had a lower employee attrition rate in Q1 than anticipated.
While we intend to continue making improvements to our efficiency profile, the magnitude of the savings captured in Q1 is not necessarily something investors should expect to repeat in Q2. Before I turn it over to Howard to provide our outlook, I want to spend a few minutes sharing a bit more on Procore Risk Advisors. Procore is a unique opportunity to help alleviate a major pain point for construction in the world of insurance. I wanna emphasize that we are in the early stages of this offering and are expecting a long journey ahead in growing the types of coverage we can broker and help underwrite. In terms of monetization, there are currently two avenues. The first is through serving as a broker by which we sell policies from third-party carriers and earn a brokerage commission, which varies by policy type.
The second is through serving as an underwriting agent for select policies, whereby Procore partners with the carrier, who is taking on the claims risk in their evaluation of the policy, providing additional industry expertise and enhanced data in exchange for a share of the premiums. It's important to note that in both of these cases, we take on zero balance sheet exposure to claims because, to be clear, we are a distribution partner for the insurance carrier who bears the risk of the insurance claims. From a financial perspective, we do not expect material top-line contribution over the next few years related to this effort. I'm incredibly proud of the work our team has done to launch Procore Risk Advisors, and I look forward to nurturing this initiative in my next role as president of Fintech. With that, I'll pass it over to Howard to provide our outlook.
Howard Fu (Senior VP of Finance)
Thanks, Paul, and thank you to everyone on the call. Before I share our outlook, I want to remind folks of our guidance philosophy, which remains unchanged. We set our revenue and margin guidance at a level that we have very high conviction we can deliver on in almost any environment. Specifically, our guidance not only takes into account the cautious customer sentiment we observed this quarter, but also allows flexibility for it to become further pronounced. With that, here is our guidance for Q2 and full year 2023. For the second quarter of 2023, we expect revenue between $216 million and $218 million, representing year-over-year growth between 25% and 27%. Q2 non-GAAP operating margin is expected to be between -7.5% and -8.5%.
For the full year fiscal 2023, we expect revenue between $908 million and $912 million, representing total year-over-year growth between 26% and 27%, which is an increase of $12 million from our previous full year guide. As Paul noted, given the early stages of our Procore Risk Advisors insurance offering, we are not expecting material revenue contribution from that initiative this year. non-GAAP operating margin for the year is expected to be between negative 5.5% and negative 6.5%, which represents an improvement of 100 basis points from the guidance we issued last quarter and implies year-over-year margin expansion of 450 basis points. As Tooey and Paul indicated, next week I will be starting my next chapter with Procore as CFO.
Over the last two years, I have had the opportunity to work with Tooey, Paul, and the leadership team, and I have developed an appreciation both for everything Procore has accomplished over the past two decades, as well as the tremendous potential ahead. I look forward to working closely with all of you in continuing to advance Procore's mission in my new capacity as CFO. To close, I'd like to thank our customers, partners, employees, shareholders, and the industry, as well as the communities we serve, for giving us this opportunity. Let's turn it over to the operator to begin Q&A.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. If you would like to ask a question, please press star, then one on your telephone keypad. If you change your mind, please press star two. We have the first question on the phone lines from Sterling Auty of SVB MoffettNathanson.
Sterling Auty (Senior Managing Director)
Yeah, thanks. Hi, guys. Paul, what a way to finish a CFO with the mic drop on results. Maybe for my question, I'll turn to Tooey. You talked about, you know, broader indices for construction being stable. What would you say to investors in terms of what should they be looking at in terms of these broader industries to determine whether they should be encouraged or maybe concerned about, you know, the performance of Procore as we move through the remainder of the year?
Tooey Courtemanche (Founder, President, and CEO)
Yeah. Well, by the way, Sterling, great to hear from you, and great question. Well, the first thing I would point out to anybody is don't over-index to any one particular data point. We look at a lot of external factors as well as internal factors when we kind of come up with our overall sentiment. I will say when I look at the quarter, the conversations that we've had with the customers have all been very largely positive as they have been in the past. Backlogs remain strong. Labor shortage is still the number one challenge. As I mentioned in the opening remarks, there are some kind of mixed signals.
Great example of this is I was talking to a customer the other day, and I asked him about their backlog, and he literally referenced a tsunami of work that he has to deal with. In a follow-up call to another customer, as they were talking about their backlog, they said it was all good except they had one project that had, was unable to obtain financing after talking to many, many banks. And he was convinced that a year ago, this deal would've been financed. There's all these different contradicting data points, but we haven't heard anything from our customers that indicate that these challenges are widespread or systematic.
We, you know, when we come back to thinking about what we are thinking, I want you to know that we are confident in our ability to deliver upon what's in our control, but we do, just like the, all of you do, look at these external, data points, but we only try to interpret them in aggregate.
Sterling Auty (Senior Managing Director)
That makes sense. Maybe just one quick follow-up. You mentioned that example about financing. Is it a tighter credit market that's more the concern, or would it be concern that in a cost savings efforts that customers would decide to either delay or cancel projects that are currently in a GC's backlog?
Tooey Courtemanche (Founder, President, and CEO)
Let me zoom out a little bit, Sterling, say that this is a single example in many, many phone calls that I had. I don't know the specifics behind that particular deal. I just know that the sentiment was that this deal might have been financed last year when it wasn't financed today. Again, that's just one small data point. I'm trying to illustrate the fact that there's so many, the industry is so big and there's so many different sectors that everyone's experiencing it slightly differently.
Sterling Auty (Senior Managing Director)
Understood. Thank you.
Tooey Courtemanche (Founder, President, and CEO)
Sure, sir. Thanks.
Operator (participant)
We now have DJ Hynes of Canaccord.
DJ Hynes (Managing Director)
Hey, guys. Thanks for having me on the call. Great, great quarter. Paul, maybe one for you. Just sticking with some of the headwinds or, you know, the pockets of challenge that you're seeing, what are you seeing in terms of duration on new deals? I guess the reason I'm asking is I'm just trying to kind of triangulate around what we're seeing in RPO growth versus CRPO growth. I mean, the latter is obviously much better. Is duration playing into it? Is that where there's some of the conservatism?
Paul Lyandres (CFO)
When you look at the long-term RPO, which I imagine is what you're referencing here, what I would tell you is there's a component of it that comes tied to that conservatism that Tooey was talking about, but I would not over-index that as the meaningful driver of it, as much as, you know, long-term RPO has a lot of moving variables around the timing of multi-year renewals. When those come up, there is traditionally a lag between Q4 to Q1 in general. You know, for the most part, what you're seeing in a long-term RPO isn't something that drives concern, but there is an element of it, of customers being more cautious to sign up for larger, longer term commitments.
DJ Hynes (Managing Director)
Yeah. Okay. Maybe a more strategic question. Quality and safety, I think, is one of your more mature products. Part A is like, where are you in terms of attach rates there? More interestingly, like part B, does the entrance into insurance and kind of potential to deliver these data-driven cost savings in any way accelerate adoption of quality and safety in the base?
Paul Lyandres (CFO)
Great question. I'd actually bring you back to the investor day we had alongside Groundbreak, where we talked about what the share of our wallet looked like in terms of which products drive which amount of our overall ARR. If you'll recall, the narrative we've always given is the older a product is, the more penetrated it is or among our customer base, and quality and safety is one of our oldest products. We have a pretty healthy majority penetration there, and we do believe that will not only help us as we think about the data we can provide to carriers and partners as we go about this insurance initiative. To your point, it does, in our mind, create this opportunity to bring the rest of the folks along for that ride with quality and safety.
We do believe that the more you adopt these solutions and the more we can prove to carriers that you're adopting best practices, the better rates we'll be able to get you. However, keep in mind, it's not unique to quality and safety. There's data in project management, there's data in financials, there is data across multiple different products that we believe will be valuable in time.
Tooey Courtemanche (Founder, President, and CEO)
Yeah. DJ, just to think of it this way-
DJ Hynes (Managing Director)
Yeah.
Tooey Courtemanche (Founder, President, and CEO)
is that because we're in the risk management business, primarily with our software, all of our products add to, contributing to understanding risk. There's a benefit for insurance, folks, to encourage the adoption of all of our product suites.
DJ Hynes (Managing Director)
Yep. Yep. Makes sense. Thanks for the color, guys.
Tooey Courtemanche (Founder, President, and CEO)
Yeah. Thanks, DJ.
Operator (participant)
We now have Saket Kalia of Barclays.
Saket Kalia (Managing Director)
Okay. Hey. Hey, guys. Thanks for taking the questions here. Tooey, maybe just to change it up a little bit from the environment, I'd love to talk a little bit about the competitive landscape. You know, I think you've talked about this a little bit in prior calls, just maybe some slight shifts in the competitive landscape. Curious if you could just give us an update on that, particularly as maybe there are, I don't know, some changes in the macro backdrop as well.
Tooey Courtemanche (Founder, President, and CEO)
Yeah. Saket, good question. Here's the kind of the short answer, is that there really has been no major updates from last quarter. Like, we haven't seen anything significant change at all. One of the things I pointed out last quarter, which I want to restate, was that in 2022, we saw one of our largest competitors less frequently than we did in 2021, but we won more ARR against them, and maybe that's the change you're referencing that we had seen. Which again, is a testament to the value I think we provide the industry. I want to kind of be very clear, we have not seen any competitive dynamic changes, that are meaningful.
Remember, you know this probably very well, that the, you know, 50% of the folks we talk to every day are, you know, coming from analog pen and paper greenfield opportunities, and it's not a competitive dynamic. Not much to report on that front.
Saket Kalia (Managing Director)
Got it. Got it. Yes, that was the one that I was referring to, so very helpful update. Paul, maybe for you know, I know it's hard to break out the exposure that Procore has to, I think you said 70 or I think Tooey said 70 categories or subcategories of construction. I think we mentioned, you know, something like 5% or under 5% from office construction. I don't wanna put words in your mouth, and I know it's really hard to sort of break this out, but, you know, is that, is that industry mix a good proxy for Procore?
Paul Lyandres (CFO)
Look, I would clarify the 5% we're referencing is, you know, construction in the industry, not specific to Procore's customers. You know, along those lines, I would tell you what we've shared with investors over the years remains consistent, right? Where we don't have meaningful exposure is kind of single family residential, that arm of the world. As long as you back that mix out of how to think about it, I would tell you, looking at the distribution of those 70 categories is the best proxy we can give you to how to think about the distribution of our own business. It's why we consistently point back to the aggregate of construction volume being the critical metric to watch.
Saket Kalia (Managing Director)
Very helpful. Thanks, guys.
Paul Lyandres (CFO)
Thanks, Zach.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. Your next question comes from Brent Bracelin with Piper Sandler.
Brent Bracelin (Managing Director)
Good afternoon. I wanted to go back to just the diversification of the model here, just as we think about the strength in RPO, that really stood out to us, particularly given an environment where you had, I think, residential starts down 29%, overall market down 9%, non-res, I think, was up 11%. Walk us through the business model. Is this just more diversified relative to your ability to sell more products into the base? Are you just seeing a shift in where the construction's coming from? Any color to help us, you know, pinpoint kind of the strength you're seeing versus what looks like a challenging kind of cyclical industry, kind of headwinds. I get there's mixed signals. You know, we're gonna be in an environment with mixed signals for a while.
In the quarter, pretty good strength here. Trying to understand why?
Paul Lyandres (CFO)
Yeah, I mean, look, you kind of spelled it out when you started to describe the numbers you have seen, right? We saw residential take a pretty meaningful hit where you saw non-residential actually show strength and resilience. What we were kind of trying to call out, what Tooey was speaking to earlier in his remarks, is when we really think about Procore, we certainly have meaningful, you know, business within the world of multifamily. I don't want to say we don't participate in residential, but if you actually go carve out multifamily, its numbers will look very different than the broader residential category.
Where we are really playing is in that non-residential world, and that's why I bring it back to say, you know, the strength and resilience of Procore's business has to do with the fact that our customers touch all of the categories that make up non-residential, and they themselves manage a very diversified book. We have the benefit of really going alongside with them in this journey of watching the industry shift, but watching overall construction volume continue to increase. That is obviously a very healthy contributor for us in terms of that CRPO. I don't want to diminish that we are continuing to see good success in that cross-sell dynamic and the ability to drive further penetration with more of our products. The two of those things certainly combined contributed to that success.
Brent Bracelin (Managing Director)
Helpful color. Just one quick follow-up, as we think about the transition, Paul to Howard, you're obviously going to be entering a new role next week. Appreciate the low bar you're creating for yourself, talking about new material contribution from Fintech Services. I look forward to a conversation with Howard next quarter on contribution. In all seriousness, as you think about the portfolio, growing portfolio of Fintech Services, Procore Risk Advisors, Procore Pay, materials financing, you know, we'll throw up PCN in there, what do you spend your time on next week? What are you most excited about relative to what impact you can have dedicating your attention to kind of those three, four areas? Thanks.
Paul Lyandres (CFO)
Yeah, look, you know, that's the wonderful thing about the transition. Sorry. I'll answer it on my behalf, and then I'll let Howard speak to it as well. I'm gonna be setting my time across those different portfolios. I think for us, the driver of this decision and this transition, what we had talked about in the previous call, really comes back to this idea that we've got a really deep bench, obviously tremendous amount of confidence in Howard and the finance team, and that there is just a really big opportunity here to go focus and dedicate that energy to where I can have the biggest impact. Pretty excited to kind of focus across the board, but I might have taken Howard's question.
Howard Fu (Senior VP of Finance)
No, that's okay. Thanks, Brent. Look, I too am continuing to be very excited about where Procore is going. A couple of things I wanna make sure I call out is that, look, for better or for worse, Paul and I have been joined at the hip over the last two years. We are very aligned in terms of where the business is going from a strategic, operational, and financial standpoint. Specifically about where I'm gonna focus my time, I typically would break it up into three categories, and there's a lot of different directions to go in those different categories. First is around operational excellence, and this ties back to what Tooey has been talking about in terms of efficient growth.
The second, to your point, is around monetization and making sure that we have lined up monetization across both the immediate term, the short term, the middle term, and the long term. Then to connect both those two things together, the third category is really about capital allocation in terms of where we deploy our resources by geo, by product, and all across all the different functions within the company. That is actually really a continuation of what we've been already doing and what I've already been focusing over the last couple of years, along with Paul and Tooey and the rest of the leadership team.
Brent Bracelin (Managing Director)
Helpful color. Thank you.
Howard Fu (Senior VP of Finance)
Thank you.
Operator (participant)
We now have Brent Thill of Jefferies.
Brent Thill (Managing Director)
Thanks. Tooey, just back to some of the headwinds you started to see. Can you just give us a sense of the magnitude? Are there any commonalities in terms of, you know, where you saw that? Did you, did you see it later in the quarter, earlier in the quarter? Just any additional color there. I guess for Paul and Howard, your guidance is above the magnitude of the beat, so many are asking kind of the confidence of raising above the magnitude of the beat. What's enabling you to do that? Thanks.
Tooey Courtemanche (Founder, President, and CEO)
Sure. Well, I'll start with the trends, which I will tell you are, they're, we don't see any at this point. The commonalities are really hard to tie together. I think what you're doing is. You know, I really sympathize with anybody who is thinking about their business right now because if you read the news, you know, there's a lot of reasons to be, you know, a little spooked about the economy. In general, we think it's just coming up in conservatism kind of across the board. There isn't one segment, there isn't one geo, there isn't one stakeholder that's standing out.
Paul Lyandres (CFO)
Yeah. To touch on the guidance piece, you know, Howard mentioned this, I mentioned this in our overall call. You know, the reason we're bringing up the theme of conservatism here is that we really wanna be transparent with you all as to the various different data points we're seeing in our business. When we set our guide at the beginning of the year, we were very intentional to tell investors that this guide factors in a, you know, macro environment that gets notably worse in time, and we would still be able to hit against that guide.
What we're telling you now is while we've seen some degree of cautiousness out there, that we still have a lot of conviction in the guide we put out there, and that you all should feel very comfortable that even in a world where we see this cautiousness get worse, that we will still deliver on the guide we provided. Howard, anything to add there?
Howard Fu (Senior VP of Finance)
Just a couple, one small thing is just to echo that we are highly confident in hitting the guide. Keep in mind that we not only had that philosophy in Q1, but we have that philosophy in Q2, in addition to also continuing to raise our guidance on the top and bottom line, and we still feel that way with that raise.
Brent Thill (Managing Director)
Thanks.
Tooey Courtemanche (Founder, President, and CEO)
Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Your next question comes from Dylan Becker of William Blair.
Dylan Becker (Equity Research Analyst)
Hey, guys. nice job here. maybe from a high level to the extent that repurposing or retrofitting maybe some of the office dynamics you called out and how that plays into maybe broader sustainability and ESG initiatives. Is that coming up in kind of customer decisioning? I know there's a lot of historical waste in construction. You've got a complex regulatory environment and layering in kind of visibility transparency. Is that something that customers are prioritizing and kind of maybe driving some of the decisioning process here as well?
Tooey Courtemanche (Founder, President, and CEO)
That's a great question. We're seeing a lot more of this outside of the U.S. market, EMEA in particular, where this is a topic that will come up with conversations with our customers there. I think you're right, which is, you know, Procore's been trying to solve this challenge of the $500 billion worth of waste and rework that happens every year. That is a tremendous impact on both our economy as well as our environment. You know, we've been heavily focused on it. We had a enterprise customer advisory board meeting recently, and I would say that about 5% of the time was talking about ESG tracking and management. It is out there, but it's still relatively muted in the North America market.
I think over time, we're gonna see a lot more of this.
Dylan Becker (Equity Research Analyst)
Got it. That makes sense. Maybe that kind of flows into the second question on international. I know, kind of a progression and path to improvements here, but thinking about maybe that regionalized segmentation and maybe how partners can play a role in supporting some of that broader productivity ramp you guys have called out that you expect to kind of layer in over time as well.
Paul Lyandres (CFO)
Yeah, look, I think we've talked about this in the past in terms of how we think about partners internationally, and the honest answer is we see it similar to how we approach the U.S. market in the sense that we will meet the customers where they are. Different markets have a different motion in leveraging partners, and that's true of resellers, but it's also true of integration partners. It's true of lots of different components of how these industries go about digitizing. As we think about our international markets, we're very thoughtful to understand how the different markets need to be served differently, and we are prepared to meet the customers, as I said, where they are.
Dylan Becker (Equity Research Analyst)
Got it. Helpful. Thanks, guys.
Tooey Courtemanche (Founder, President, and CEO)
Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. We now have Adam Borg of Stifel.
Adam Borg (Managing Director)
Awesome. Thanks, guys, for taking the question. Maybe two. First, just on the international business, going back to that, where are we with those the operational changes that we've been talking about? When can we expect those improvements? I have a follow-up.
Tooey Courtemanche (Founder, President, and CEO)
Yeah. We mentioned this last quarter, I wanna say for this quarter, there are no major updates. We continue to make improvements, which I'm very pleased with. But this is one of those things that's not gonna be fixed overnight. As we shared before, we expect to see improvements towards the end of this year. But there's nothing kind of significant right now to call out. When there is, you'll certainly hear it from us.
Adam Borg (Managing Director)
Awesome. Thanks so much. Maybe just a quick follow-up. You talked obviously a lot about the pockets of macro concern. Just curious the first, call it four plus weeks of the second quarter, the month of March, any change in the demand environment overall or any change in those macro commentary that you talked about earlier? Thanks so much.
Paul Lyandres (CFO)
Yeah, I'd tell you there's nothing meaningful to call out there. We're still very early into Q2, and we will keep you posted when we report here in 90 days.
Adam Borg (Managing Director)
Awesome. Thanks so much.
Tooey Courtemanche (Founder, President, and CEO)
Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. We now have Ken Wong of Oppenheimer.
Ken Wong (Managing Director)
Great. Thanks for taking my question. Tooey, we touched on financing earlier, and we all see the headlines with the regional banks. I guess, you know, do you have a view on kinda what that impact could be? What is the consolidation in the banking sector potentially, you know, what that impact is on your end market customer? To Paul, or I guess maybe you as well, Tooey, like, do you potentially see any pullback from regional bank lending to construction as a potential opportunity for your own capital lending aspirations? Thank you.
Tooey Courtemanche (Founder, President, and CEO)
On the first point, yeah, we, this is not a topic that has been a trend that I've got enough information on to, you know, speak in terms of something that's gonna impact Procore. Again, we do hear these anecdotal stories, but, they are still somewhat few and far between.
Paul Lyandres (CFO)
Yeah. It's one of the mixed signals. There's a lot of positive trends. There are some that provide cautiousness. We are, you know, committed to keeping you all posted as we continue to learn more. At this point, there's a lot of contradicting comments out there. In terms of your other question on the pullback of banking, I think I can be very simple. No. No way. Our material financing program is a very unique specific program. This is not a business. We do not plan to become a bank lender.
Ken Wong (Managing Director)
Got it. Appreciate the color there.
Tooey Courtemanche (Founder, President, and CEO)
Sure.
Operator (participant)
Your next question comes from Kash Rangan of Goldman Sachs.
Kash Rangan (Managing Director)
Hey, guys. Congratulations on the quarter, Tooey, Paul, and Howard. Howard, congratulations on your new role. It's pretty remarkable you guys are putting up these numbers, whether it's a good economy, bad economy, whatnot. If you could construct or deconstruct the growth algorithm. Let's say commercial construction is gonna grow 4% or 5%, and Procore is gonna grow, I don't know, pick a number, 30%. If you can just help us understand what are the broader parts of the multi-hundred billion dollar construction industry that you particularly leverage, so we can understand what really drives your growth. I think as you, Tooey, as you mentioned, it's very hard to not react to the headlines, slowing economy, you know, banks lending less, credit crisis, whatnot. At the same time, you guys are putting up...
You added 609 new customers, which is more than what you added in Q4. Typically, software companies have the seasonality in Q1, but you're bucking that. If you can just deconstruct that growth algorithm, what are the, I think you mentioned 1 out of commercial construction is, or office is one out of 70 subsectors, things like that. If you can come up with a deconstruction of the growth algorithm, link the left extreme which is the growth in the industry, to the growth at Procore. That'll be mighty useful. Thank you so much.
Paul Lyandres (CFO)
Yeah. No, happy to take that one, Kash. I think this is the beauty of the business we have and the diversification of the industry. I'd bring you back to kind of that comment Zach had made earlier in this call in terms of thinking about those 70 different categories and appreciating that we, Procore, are pretty diversified across those 70 categories. What that really means, Kash, is we are still super early days in the overall penetration of the overall TAM. We're early days in the ability to cross-sell and drive more products into our customers. In the arc of time, we continue to be bullish on the opportunity for the business. The cautiousness components, the things we've seen with customers, they do create a mixed signal out there that can cloud the short term.
The growth algorithm for us, when you really think about it over time, remains highly under-penetrated market that needs to digitize with tons of wallet share opportunity. We're more bringing the short term components of saying like, "Hey, it's an unknown macro environment out there, and we have to be mindful of that.
Kash Rangan (Managing Director)
Your point is that even if the industry grows slowly, you're gaining more share of that wallet. Your customer count is, I don't know what it is, sixteen, seven, less than 16,000, it's a drop in the bucket relative to the number of firms. Therefore, you can grow horizontally, capture more of the customer base while the customer base itself is probably not growing that rapidly. Is that the high level algorithm? You have, to your point, the yield, you have certain basis points of the value of construction, which you continue to gain share as you sell more modules. Is that the rough way to think about the growth algorithm for the company?
Paul Lyandres (CFO)
Yeah. I think that's a good way to think about it.
Kash Rangan (Managing Director)
It's super high level. We'll drill into it another time when we speak. Talk to you soon.
Paul Lyandres (CFO)
Looking forward to it.
Kash Rangan (Managing Director)
Congrats.
Paul Lyandres (CFO)
Thanks.
Kash Rangan (Managing Director)
All right. Cheers.
Paul Lyandres (CFO)
Thanks.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. We now have Matthew Broome of Mizuho Securities.
Matthew Broome (Senior Analyst)
Thanks very much, and congrats on the results, guys. I guess, when you spoke about some customers being more cautious to sign up for those larger, longer term commitments, just so I'm clear, does that mean the caution was coming from larger customers or was it... I don't know. Am I hearing that correctly, or maybe you could clear that up?
Paul Lyandres (CFO)
Yeah. No. I would tell you, as we shared earlier, there wasn't any particular call-out with respect to where, which type of customer, which segment of customer we saw that from. It was more of a reflection of we saw it in a small pocket of our customer base. Now, it's worth reminding this was where this mixed signal piece really does come to play because we saw the share of our customers that grew their construction volume grow and represent a majority of our customers. We saw the share of customers that are downgrading also grow, which you can imply means the customers that renewed flat went down.
Matthew Broome (Senior Analyst)
Okay. That makes sense. Then I guess, how has activity been trending on the Procore Construction Network?
Tooey Courtemanche (Founder, President, and CEO)
Yeah. By the way, it's an area that we're all very excited about. It is very much a big part of our connected strategy to bring everybody together on our platform. We are still building, and we're still assembling a, you know, trying to get everything coming together. There's no really new news to announce, you're gonna be hearing more about it in the next couple quarters. It's something I'm particularly very excited about.
Matthew Broome (Senior Analyst)
Okay, perfect. Thanks very much.
Tooey Courtemanche (Founder, President, and CEO)
Yeah. Thank you. Appreciate it.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. Our final question comes from Jason Celino of KeyBanc Capital Markets.
Jason Celino (Director and Senior Research Analyst)
Hey, hey, guys. Thanks for fitting me in. You know, last question here on kind of that small portion of customers, you know, exercising the caution. Given kind of the way your model works, you know, if these customers do decide to true up later in the year, you know, hypothetically, they would pay more. I guess, can you just talk about like what the customer is evaluating and, you know, the puts and takes?
Paul Lyandres (CFO)
Yeah. I mean, you kind of did a great job summarizing it there yourself, Jason. Like, that is the right way to think about it, right? Our pricing is based on overall construction volume of a customer that they're gonna run through the platform. We will give customers volume discounts for signing up for additional volume. In an instance where a customer is proving to be more conservative, they're gonna sign up for less volume, but they're gonna pay a higher take rate, which means to the extent they end up burning through that amount of construction volume sooner than their contract, they're gonna end up upgrading in the middle of that cycle at a higher take rate than they otherwise would've, had they committed a larger volume up front.
I think that's the benefit to our model and something that, you know, we're mindful of could be a tailwind to us, depending on where the world goes.
Jason Celino (Director and Senior Research Analyst)
Okay, perfect. No, thanks for the clarification. Actually, one quick one on sales and marketing. It looks like it was flat quarter-over-quarter, and you're showing some really nice leverage. Just wondering if there was any hiring or sales investments that just got moved later? Thanks.
Howard Fu (Senior VP of Finance)
You know, our hiring in Q1 actually performed quite well. The other thing I'll remind you is we are in our broader hiring across the company, not just in sales and marketing, we're being very deliberate about who we hire, how we hire, when we hire, and what we hire for. That has been a trend that we've been on and a focus that we've been focused on since last year. It's actually nothing new. We're actually seeing really good dynamics from a hiring standpoint. In fact, our attrition has actually performed really well in Q1.
Jason Celino (Director and Senior Research Analyst)
Okay, cool. Thanks, Howard.
Tooey Courtemanche (Founder, President, and CEO)
Thank you. Operator?
Operator (participant)
Thank you. I can confirm we have no more questions, and this does conclude today's call. Please have a lovely day, and you may now disconnect your lines.