RS
Research Solutions, Inc. (RSSS)·Q1 2026 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q1 FY26 delivered modest top-line growth with expanding margins: total revenue $12.31M (+2% YoY), gross margin 50.6% (+270 bps YoY), net income $0.75M, diluted EPS $0.02, and Adjusted EBITDA $1.47M (second-best quarter in company history) .
- Platform momentum continued: platform revenue rose 18% to $5.12M (42% of revenue), Total ARR climbed 21% to $21.29M, with B2B ARR up 21% to $14.76M and record organic Q1 B2B net ARR growth ($561K) on larger six-figure wins, including the company’s largest-ever Scite AI deal .
- Transactions remained a headwind: revenue fell 6.8% to $7.19M on lower per-article fees and fewer active customers; management noted roughly 60% of the corporate decline stemmed from a single churned account and two large customers buying less due to macro/research prioritization .
- No formal guidance; management expects typical Q1→Q2 seasonality but a less pronounced dip and even a “shot at some EBITDA growth” sequentially, and aims to outperform FY25 in each remaining quarter, supporting a positive full-year trajectory .
- Catalysts: accelerating AI rights add-on (RightsDel), publisher AI gateway on Scite, rising ASPs from improved sales execution, and a growing B2C-to-B2B pipeline; management is also pursuing M&A with an active pipeline, albeit not expecting a close by year-end .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- “Strongest organic Q1 growth on record within our B2B business,” driven by “multiple six-figure deals, including our largest ever Scite AI deal,” and ASPs “near all-time high levels” .
- Margin expansion: total gross margin improved 270 bps to 50.6% on mix shift to higher-margin platforms and expanding platform margins (88.1% GM, +70 bps YoY) .
- Cash generation: operating cash flow rose 31% to $1.11M; TTM CFO reached $7.3M and TTM Adjusted EBITDA $5.5M (11.1% margin), reinforcing reinvestment capacity .
What Went Wrong
- Transaction segment softness: revenue down 6.8% YoY to $7.19M, customers fell to 1,326 (from 1,390), and transaction GM declined to 23.8% (from 25.7%) .
- Corporate customer pressure: ~60% of corporate decline tied to one churned account; two other large customers reduced spend due to macro/research priorities, tempering near-term recovery expectations .
- B2C ARR net decline (-$186K) amid competitive intensity and below-target trial-to-paid conversion; management is iterating product and messaging to improve conversion while noting lifetime value and churn trends are improving .
Financial Results
Headline Metrics vs Prior Periods and Estimates
Values marked with * retrieved from S&P Global.
Notes: Company reported diluted EPS of $0.02 in Q1 FY26 ; S&P Global “Primary EPS” may differ from diluted EPS methodology.
- Q1 FY26 revenue was a slight beat vs consensus (actual $12.31M vs $12.29M*).
- Q1 FY26 EPS was below consensus on both primary and diluted EPS measures (actual primary $0.03* vs $0.0333*; diluted EPS $0.02 vs consensus primary $0.0333*), while Q4 FY25 was a clear EPS beat and Q3 FY25 was a miss .
Segment Breakdown
KPIs
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- CEO on B2B momentum: “We posted the strongest organic Q1 growth on record within our B2B business, aided by winning multiple six-figure deals, including our largest ever Scite AI deal… With these deals our Average Sales Price (ASP) is now near all-time high levels.”
- CFO on seasonality and outlook: “We think… the dip [in adjusted EBITDA] will be less pronounced in Q2… and there's also a shot at some EBITDA growth sequentially… our goal remains to experience outperformance to fiscal 2025 in each of the remaining quarters.”
- CSO on AI strategy: RightsDel to monetize AI usage on articles; Scite-based AI gateway with publishers; aim to introduce AI usage metrics akin to COUNTER to enable pricing and upsell .
- CEO on transactions mix: “Our academic segment is growing, and the corporate segment is declining, with about 60% of that decline coming from one churned account… [other] two customers… are buying less year-over-year… based primarily on the current economic environment or changes in their research priorities.”
Q&A Highlights
- AI rights add-on attach rates: Too early for a definitive attach rate; initial sales to existing customers; potential ARR uplift discussed anecdotally (~50% opportunity cited in industry chatter), but not a major contributor to ASP this quarter; larger new logo deals drove ASP .
- B2C conversion strategy: 7-day trials; improved outputs (up to 15-page referenced reports) may reduce time-to-solve; conversion below last year amid higher competition; rigorous testing of UI/UX and messaging; churn and LTV improving; growing B2C→B2B pipeline (> $1M vs ~$50K a year ago) .
- ARR durability: Larger deals are becoming more common; pipeline contains similarly sized opportunities; sales process and marketing funnel improvements support sustainability (no pull-forward) .
- Cost structure: G&A lower after executive departure; viewed as a reasonable run-rate barring legal/recruiting spikes; modest increases possible .
- Transactions outlook and macro: Limited visibility; stabilization vs Q4; hope for reduced decline in H2 after lapping sharper drops; no material impact from government shutdown; headless integrations remain in pipeline for large corporates building internal LLMs .
Estimates Context
- Q1 FY26 revenue slightly beat consensus ($12.31M actual vs $12.29M*), while EPS missed (Primary EPS $0.03* vs $0.0333*; diluted EPS $0.02 reported) .
- Prior quarters: Q4 FY25 was an EPS beat (actual primary $0.086* vs $0.055*), while Q3 FY25 was a miss (actual primary $0.0242* vs $0.03*) .
- Implication: Sell-side models likely to raise platform margin assumptions and ARR growth trajectory, but maintain caution on transactions recovery and B2C conversion until clearer sequential improvements emerge.
Values marked with * retrieved from S&P Global.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Platform-led model is working: mix shifting to high-margin platforms with sustained margin gains and disciplined sales execution; ASPs rising on larger deals and value-based pricing .
- Near-term EPS variability: Q1 EPS miss vs consensus was modest and primarily reflects dilution from measure definitions and transactions softness; Q4 beat demonstrates operating leverage potential .
- Watch ARR and deployments: B2B ARR and deployments continue to climb; sustained incremental ARR and ASP progression should underpin medium-term revenue visibility .
- Transactions remain the swing factor: corporate concentration risks and lower per-article fees are headwinds; stabilization signs appear, but recovery timing uncertain—monitor customer churn/buying patterns and pricing .
- AI rights and publisher gateway are strategic: RightsDel and Scite AI gateway can unlock new monetization (AI usage metrics), drive upsell, and deepen publisher partnerships—key to the AI narrative and potential ARR uplift .
- Cash generation supports reinvestment: Strong TTM CFO and Adjusted EBITDA provide dry powder for sales/marketing and selective M&A; active pipeline exists though not expected to close by year-end .
- Setup into FY26: Management targets outperformance vs FY25 each remaining quarter and sees a less-pronounced Q2 dip; sequential EBITDA growth is possible, providing potential positive estimate revisions if delivered .