Sign in

    Udemy (UDMY)

    UDMY Q4 2024: Enterprise Deals Up; Q1 Revenue Hit by $20M SMB Pullback

    Reported on May 23, 2025 (After Market Close)
    Pre-Earnings Price$7.82Last close (Feb 13, 2025)
    Post-Earnings Price$8.45Open (Feb 14, 2025)
    Price Change
    $0.63(+8.06%)
    • Strong Enterprise Momentum: Executives highlighted positive signals from large enterprise customers, including improved win rates and numerous deals exceeding $100K, indicating robust demand and deeper engagement in the enterprise segment.
    • Innovative AI-powered Product Enhancements: Management is leveraging AI to scale assessments and roleplay simulations, already live in certain subjects, which underpins accelerated product innovation and could drive higher learner engagement.
    • Career Academies Launch: The planned rollout of 6 career academies in early H1, with additional pathways to follow, is poised to boost both consumer and enterprise engagement by offering structured, career-oriented learning experiences.
    • Reduction in SMB Sales Capacity: The pullback of $20 million in SMB sales capacity is already impacting Q1 revenue, indicating potential headwinds in revenue growth as the company shifts focus toward larger enterprise deals.
    • Persistent FX Headwinds: The guidance and Q&A responses repeatedly reference negative FX impacts (approximately 2 percentage points) that are weighing on revenue performance, creating uncertainty amid volatile currency conditions.
    • Consumer Segment Weakness: The decline in consumer revenue (with Q4 consumer revenue down 7% year-over-year and guidance indicating further declines) raises concerns about the effectiveness of marketplace revitalization efforts and overall revenue diversification.
    1. UB Guidance
      Q: Q1 revenue sequential decline?
      A: Management explained that the slight decline is driven by FX headwinds, a $20M SMB pullback, and the quarter’s shorter duration, with a recovery expected as conditions stabilize.

    2. EBITDA Guidance
      Q: Will $10M flow through?
      A: They reaffirmed their $130–150M EBITDA 2026 target, emphasizing margin improvements from a revenue mix shift, cost savings, and revenue share changes.

    3. ARR Growth
      Q: How will enterprise ARR trend?
      A: Management expects muted net new ARR early in the year that will ramp up in H2, with ARR serving as a leading indicator for future revenue gains.

    4. Consumer Outlook
      Q: What drives consumer revenue growth?
      A: The rollout of product innovations, such as career academies, is expected to boost engagement and convert to higher LTV subscriptions on both consumer and enterprise sides.

    5. Competitive Landscape
      Q: Any changes in competition?
      A: They reported no material changes in the competitive landscape, with improved win rates attributed to focused execution in key verticals.

    6. AI Assessments
      Q: Timeline for Gen AI assessments?
      A: The Gen AI process is already live in select subjects and will be scaled to cover additional topics progressively over one year.

    7. Career Academies
      Q: When are academies launching?
      A: Plans call for launching 6 academies early in H1 with 7 additional pilots to refine the model, covering diverse career pathways.

    8. Macro Impact
      Q: Impact from administration changes?
      A: They see no material impact from the new administration, focusing instead on executing their skills development strategy regardless of political shifts.

    9. Budget Trends
      Q: What about L&D budget changes?
      A: Early indications suggest some budget loosening, but management notes it’s too early to draw definitive conclusions on enterprise L&D spending.

    10. Marketplace Revitalization
      Q: Are new features monetizable?
      A: Enhancements are expected to drive both improved engagement and direct monetization through increased consumer subscriptions and career academy offerings.

    11. Course Interest
      Q: How do AI vs non-AI interests compare?
      A: There’s a notable rise in interest for soft skills and leadership courses, balancing technical offerings with increasing demand for non-AI content.

    12. Capital Allocation
      Q: What’s next for share buybacks?
      A: The strategy remains to allocate capital prudently, maintaining flexibility for M&A while returning excess cash to shareholders when the timing is right.

    13. Customer Engagement
      Q: How are customers responding?
      A: Large enterprises are giving positive signals, showing higher retention rates and favorable feedback on soft skills capabilities, with current R&D resources deemed sufficient for new roleplay simulations.

    Research analysts covering Udemy.