VI
Vimeo, Inc. (VMEO)·Q2 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q2 2025 revenue was $104.65M, flat year over year (+0.3%), with diluted EPS of $0.04; gross margin held at 78% and Adjusted EBITDA reached $10.9M, up sequentially from $4.8M in Q1 .
- Vimeo raised FY25 Adjusted EBITDA guidance to approximately $35M from $25–$30M, maintained low-single-digit full-year revenue growth and ~$6M operating income; Q3 guidance calls for revenue ~$106M, operating income ~$2M, and Adjusted EBITDA ~$9M .
- Segment dynamics: Vimeo Enterprise revenue grew 25% YoY to $25.0M, while Self-Serve revenue declined 1% YoY but delivered 11% YoY bookings growth; Add-Ons were -20% YoY and OTT -3% YoY .
- Key catalyst: Raised FY25 EBITDA guidance alongside accelerating Self-Serve bookings and continued Enterprise strength; management reiterated line of sight to double-digit growth aspirations, supported by AI-driven product velocity .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Enterprise revenue rose 25% YoY, with bookings +9%, subscribers +10%, ARPU +12%; notable new wins included Jaguar Land Rover, Spotify, and FanDuel .
- Self-Serve bookings increased 11% YoY—the highest rate in 14 quarters—driven by price increases, stable renewals, and ARPU +11%; management: “retention rates…continue to be strong” under new pricing/packaging .
- Sequential profit improvement: net income $6.3M, Adjusted EBITDA $10.9M, cash from operations $19.4M, free cash flow $17.8M; stock-based compensation fell 39% YoY to $5.1M .
What Went Wrong
- Revenue slightly missed consensus ($104.65M vs $105.76M); EPS of $0.04 materially beat a -$0.01 consensus, but year-over-year net earnings declined from $10.1M to $6.3M as growth investments weighed on profitability .
- Enterprise bookings growth (9%) was impacted by churn of a large bandwidth-heavy customer that had under-adopted broader Enterprise features; management outlined retention and expansion process improvements .
- Add-Ons revenue dropped 20% YoY amid commoditization of bandwidth; management expects future “consumables” (e.g., AI credits) to offset over time .
Financial Results
Consolidated Results vs Prior Periods and Consensus
Notes: Values marked with * are retrieved from S&P Global.
- Result vs estimates highlights: EPS beat (0.04 vs -0.01); EBITDA beat ($10.9M vs $5.60M); revenue slight miss ($104.65M vs $105.76M)*.
Segment Revenue Breakdown
KPIs and Bookings
Non-GAAP adjustments: Stock-based compensation down to $5.1M (-39% YoY), restructuring costs of $1.5M included in GAAP OpEx; non-GAAP gross margin stable at 78% .
Guidance Changes
FY25 Adjusted EBITDA reconciliation provided (OI ~$6.2M, SBC $26.8M, D&A ~$2.0M → AEBITDA ~$35.0M) .
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- CEO letter: “We delivered strong results in Q2…in two of the fastest growing technology markets, video and AI… We started to generate revenue and new pipeline from our discrete investments, including AI translations.”
- CEO on Enterprise momentum: “We’re winning competitive deals… customers consolidate their video platforms into us… new technology hitting Q3/Q4 (workspaces), higher-grade security… translations monetization across entire libraries.”
- CFO on Self-Serve: “Retention rates…continue to be strong even as we roll out new pricing and packaging… this could be a double-digit grower” (with subscriber growth more likely into 2026) .
- CFO on capital allocation: “Three legs… invest in the business, buy back shares, and M&A… we maintain a strong cash balance and are more efficient with investments this year” .
Q&A Highlights
- Self-Serve pricing/retention: Pricing and packaging changes supporting retention and ARPU expansion; focus on new subscribers and product engagement to drive growth .
- Enterprise bookings and churn: One large bandwidth-centric customer churned; product roadmap (workspaces, AI translations) and customer support revamps aimed at retention/expansion .
- Macro and search: Some geography/sector softness and tariff-related uncertainty; improved ROAS and AI tools to bolster SEO/discovery and efficiency .
- Capital allocation: Maintaining a balanced approach (invest, buybacks, M&A) with disciplined thresholds; strong cash and free cash flow provide flexibility .
Estimates Context
- Q2 2025 results vs S&P Global consensus:
- Revenue: $104.65M vs $105.76M* → minor miss .
- EPS: $0.04 vs -$0.01* → significant beat .
- EBITDA: $10.9M (Adjusted EBITDA) vs $5.60M* → beat .
- Implications: Street models likely lift on EBITDA efficiency and Self-Serve momentum; modest top-line miss offset by stronger margins and raised FY EBITDA guidance .
Notes: Values marked with * are retrieved from S&P Global.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Raised FY25 Adjusted EBITDA guidance (~$35M) signals improved efficiency and confidence in monetizing recent product investments—an upside catalyst near term .
- Self-Serve momentum (bookings +11% YoY, ARPU +11%, retention stable) supports accelerating revenue trajectory into H2; watch subscriber trends and product engagement metrics .
- Enterprise remains the growth engine (revenue +25% YoY) despite a churn headwind; pipeline, security features (workspaces), and AI translations underpin reacceleration prospects .
- Mix headwinds in Add-Ons and modest OTT declines persist; management’s “consumables” strategy (AI credits) aims to replace commoditized bandwidth revenue over time .
- Q3 guide (rev ~$106M, OI ~$2M, AEBITDA ~$9M) frames sequential improvement; delivery against this will be a key checkpoint for margin durability and growth reacceleration .
- Capital allocation remains balanced with ample liquidity ($303M cash), continued buybacks, and disciplined M&A—supporting downside protection while investing in growth .
- Narrative drivers: AI product velocity, Enterprise consolidation wins, and Self-Serve recovery are the themes to focus on for estimate revisions and stock reaction into H2 .