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CareCloud Inc
NASDAQ:CCLD

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Earnings Call Transcript

Earnings Call Transcript
2021-Q3

from 0
Operator

Welcome to the CareCloud Third Quarter 2021 Results Conference Call. Please note this event is being recorded.

I would now like to turn the conference call over to Kim Blanche, CareCloud's General Counsel. Ms. Blanche, the floor is yours.

K
Kimberly Blanche
General Counsel, VP of Compliance & Secretary

Thank you, and good morning, everyone. Welcome to the CareCloud third quarter 2021 conference call. On today's call are Mahmud Haq, our Founder and Executive Chairman; A. Hadi Chaudhry, our Chief Executive Officer, President, and Director; Stephen Snyder, our Chief Strategy Officer and a Director; and Bill Korn, our Chief Financial Officer.

Before we begin, I would like to remind you that certain statements made during this conference call are forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 as amended. All statements other than statements of historical fact made during this conference call are forward-looking statements including, without limitation, statements regarding our expectations and guidance for future financial and operational performance, expected growth, business outlook, and potential organic growth and acquisitions.

Forward-looking statements may sometimes be identified with words such as will, may, expect, plan, anticipate, upcoming, believe, estimate, or similar terminology and the negative of these terms. Forward-looking statements are not promises or guarantees of future performance and are subject to a variety of risks and uncertainties, many of which are beyond our control which could cause actual results to differ materially from those contemplated in these forward-looking statements. These statements reflect our opinions only as of the date of this presentation, and we undertake no obligation to revise these forward-looking statements in light of new information or future events. Please refer to our press release and our reports filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission where you'll find a more comprehensive discussion of our performance and factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from these forward-looking statements. For anyone who dialed into the call by telephone, you may want to download our third quarter 2021 earnings presentation. Please visit our Investor Relations site, ir.carecloud.com, click on events and download the earnings presentation.

And finally, on today's call, we may refer to certain non-GAAP financial measures. Please refer to today's press release announcing our third quarter 2021 results for a reconciliation of these non-GAAP performance measures to our GAAP financial results. And with that said, I'll now turn the call over to our CEO, Hadi Chaudhry.

H
Hadi Chaudhry
Chief Executive Officer, President, and Director

Thank you, Kim. Good morning, and welcome to our third quarter 2021 earnings call. I'm delighted to be here this morning, and I'm excited to share with you how CareCloud continues to thrive in this large and dynamic health care marketplace. 2021 is certainly turning out to be another breakout year for us and remain incredibly excited and optimistic for what the future holds for us. In terms of the third quarter 2021, I am pleased to report that we had another record-breaking quarter.

As we stepped into this year, we set out to accomplish a variety of important initiatives and execute against some lofty gold. Number one, we set out to continue to achieve record revenue and profitability while maintaining our historically disciplined fiscal approach. Number two, we're committed to expanding our addressable market and the types of customers we could ultimately serve. Number three, we set out to launch new and innovative products; and number four, it was important for us to reinforce our position as a tech company in health care while also crystallizing our brand and market position. I'm excited to say that we have already accomplished many of these and are on track to execute against all 4 of them by the end of this year. This is an exceptional accomplishment, and I would like to take a moment to thank our customers and our employees worldwide for your incredible work in helping us achieve what we have thus far.

I would like to take a few minutes to provide some additional color and insights into some of these for you. In terms of revenue growth, we have achieved another record quarter with $38 million in revenue. We continue to accelerate our growth and have been able to add revenue to a variety of means. It is important that we maintain a fiscally disciplined approach that has allowed us to drive adjusted EBITDA growth quarter-over-quarter. I'm happy to report that we again -- that we once again achieved record-breaking adjusted EBITDA, $6.7 million for third quarter 2021.

Of our approach of constantly evaluating different revenue levers and seeking ways to expand our addressable market is key to our strategy, whether through the addition of new innovative software products, the ability for us to pursue additional markets through partnership, but through our proven competence to source and execute on our acquisitions. This combination continues to place us in a great position to succeed as an organization. This year, we had the opportunity to complete an acquisition that has done just that. It has expanded our addressable market by allowing us to provide health care consulting and on-demand, technical, and revenue cycle staffing services and given us a far better position in the health system and hospital space. We continue to be encouraged by the great progress our medSR team is making, the manner in which our integration efforts are progressing and the leadership they continue to exhibit.

In terms of leadership, we recently announced executive leadership appointments at medSR as well as the addition of dedicated resources in support of the changing and growing needs of our health system clients in this new normal they find themselves in. MedSR has appointed additional seasoned leaders that rounds out the executive team and helps us all execute across every aspect of the business. We have appointed a seasoned CareCloud veteran as Chief Operating Officer and a new Chief Revenue Officer for medSR, who brings a vast amount of knowledge in the health care industry as seasoned executives having worked at organizations like Athenahealth, Cerner, Santa Rosa Consulting, and Deloitte Consulting. These new appointments are important as we continue to integrate, help bring additional capabilities, promote the cross-pollination of ideas, and to prove transformational for our combined businesses while bringing additional depth and grit as we look to further a scale.

Our company's combined integrated offerings are beginning to gain traction with clients and prospects alike in both the small hospital setting to large multi regen health systems. These organizations are turning to CareCloud to extend their workforce and integrate their EHR and RCM platforms to optimize performance as they strive to improve access to care and the patient experience while facing an industry-wide workforce shortage and increased pressure on revenue. As I have mentioned in the past, these deals takes time, but we believe that our combined strength, leadership position, and robust value proposition position us to execute well against our strategy.

As we have expanded our universe of solutions through the medSR acquisition, we made a conscious and strategic effort to focus on these nonrecurring revenue deals as we believe they can provide significant upside downstream. We are excited about these deals as we believe they set the foundation we need to have our foot in the door, so to speak, and allow us to later convert a portion of these new clients into long-term recurring revenue contracts. This gives us great confidence that it is incredibly cost-effective to bring on these types of customers onboard and then focus on expanding the relationship through upsells and cross-selling opportunities.

Selling into this market takes time and is incredibly difficult, but never in our history have we had such a prominent seat at the table. These types of expansion deals currently in our pipeline are transformative in nature and could present significant ACV contracts in due time. Our sales team are hard at work in making this a reality. In fact, our sales team across all of our segments and business units continue to push hard and win in the field. In terms of overall spend, in 2019, we spent about $1.5 million in sales and marketing compared to $6.6 million in 2020 and $6.5 million in first 9 months of 2021. As we have said, we will continue to spend in sales and marketing so long as we can maintain a healthy client acquisition cost.

Let's now focus on some additional exciting news. I've mentioned before that addressable market expansion and continuing to launch new and innovative products remain an important focus of ours. To that end, I am excited to announce today that later this quarter, we will be rolling out a new technology platform that does just that. It expands our market reach and adds significant technology assets to our portfolio. This new and innovative platform, we will soon release, will give us even more capabilities in our enterprise market segments, but also as significant it expands the type of customers we can serve. With this new product suite, we will be able to provide technology solutions and service capabilities to health care IT vendors, large system integrators, and other health care and digital health ecosystem partners, potentially even including those in the fair space.

Earlier this year, we discussed how we had been working on a new technology solution we call conductor. We talked about how our R&D teams have been working on the problem of unifying health care data across multiple systems, partners, and platforms, not only our -- not only cross our internal systems but across our vast network of partners and integrations. This technology would help us as we continue to scale our current business while also assisting us when we acquired companies as it relates to our integration needs. As we continue to develop this new solution and think about its real-world usage, our thinking, and strategy award. We now see CareCloud Conductor as a family of technologies, or in other words, a product suite of tools for interoperability, data exchange, transformation, and connectivity rather than as a single product. It is a suite of solutions that are designed to work well together for as stand-alone solutions.

Later this quarter, we will be bringing to market the first of these solutions within the CareCloud Conductor suite. We call this new product, CareCloud Connector. CareCloud Connector is a platform that connects organizations to a ready-to-use integration library for health care IT systems, improving data management, increasing visibility and control of these interfaces, and providing more robust vendor libraries for clients and partners to manage on their own. For example, today, an enterprise client or health care IT vendor may be required to host on many dozens of interfaces with third-party systems, labs, proprietary software, connectivity partners, and the like using several software tools and making centralized management incredibly cumbersome and expensive.

With CareCloud Connector, there is one centralized management console and hundreds of interface libraries to choose from, making significantly easier for these new customers to manage and scale. We know this to be true as this solution was built for our own needs internally in order to effectively manage the multiple -- the multitude of complex systems we need to integrate with our own business. We have that advantage versus some other competitors in that we have lived these problems and have needed to look for ways to solve it ourselves. This work is the culmination of decades of knowledge and investment, and we now have an opportunity to package these offerings and bring it to market.

As part of the CareCloud Conductor suite, we will be incorporating the new and improved CareCloud CollectiveIQ rules engine. CollectiveIQ is our stand-alone rules engine that brings an advanced collection of automated billing rules and our proprietary algorithm that help health care organizations improve collections and cash flow, reduce administrative costs, and stay ahead of changing health care regulations.

Later next year, we will introduce other products within the CareCloud Conductor product suite, including a powerful one-of-a-kind semantic translation engine and schema builder and a stand-alone EDI transactions transmission solution. CareCloud Conductor sets the stage for our array into a new market. We are very excited about these new capabilities as it relates to interoperability, data exchange and transformation, and the boundless opportunities we see as we believe it could unlock new markets for us to pursue and the revenue opportunities they represent while giving us an advantage during our system integration phase with companies we may acquire.

Lastly, I have continued to meet with investors, analysts, employees, and customers across the country. I'm truly humbled by the incredible opportunity we have as a company and the real impact we are making for our clients nationwide and see our mission come to life. Most recently, I had the opportunity to see firsthand how our RPA bought a proprietary workflow technology solution and our team of our team specialist has been able to significantly improve a sizable customers experience with us post a recent transition and drive better metrics towards their bottom line. It is always great for me when I receive communications from clients. In this case, our large enterprise customer CEO, thanking our team on the hard work they perform on the daily basis. Its interactions like this one I just mentioned that energizes us to continue to deliver leading technology-enabled solutions to the more than 440,000 providers in medical practices and health systems focused on delivering quality patient care nationwide.

Our mission remains to deliver comprehensive end-to-end solutions needed in order for our customers and prospects to thrive in today's highly complex changing health care environment. And of course, we accomplished this purpose through our mastery of software platforms and services we have as part of our product portfolio as well as our additional capability to design and build customized solutions required to meet the unique needs of our customers.

In terms of crystallizing of market position, I will continue to ensure that we strive to emphasize and press our leading market presence, our truly distinct position as a leading technology company in the health care and work hard to discourage notions that lump us together with other companies that may look like us on the surface but are vastly different upon taking a deeper look. We are fortunate to be amongst just a small few leading technology companies in the health care IT market, entrusted with deploying proprietary software solutions, including certified electronic health records, and practice management product, patient experience management platforms, and a host of other software and services to a host of health care organization of all sizes. We do not take this for granted and we'll continue to forge ahead, break new bounds and continue the legacy of making bold moves.

Once again, it is my pleasure to report that CareCloud is in its strongest position ever, and I'm excited for what the future holds for us. I will now turn over the floor to Steve Snyder, our Chief Strategy Officer. Steve?

S
Stephen Snyder
Chief Strategy Officer and Director

Great. Thanks, Hadi, and thank you, everyone, again, for joining us on today's call. During the third quarter, we were very excited to celebrate our company's 20 year anniversary. With 2 decades behind us, it's truly a privilege to still have a growing universe of people who are new to our story and interested in learning more about us. With that in mind, we'd like to take a few short minutes to step back and provide some background regarding 3 areas that often generate questions amongst new investors and individuals interested in our story, namely our founding purpose, our heritage of technological innovation, and our entry into the public markets. After that, we'll turn to do a deeper dive into our financial performance for the third quarter.

First, let's discuss our origin story for a moment. For those who are new to our company, we are founded in September 2001 as a direct outgrowth of our founder, Mahmud Haq's exhaustive search for a health care IT and revenue psycho management partner for his wife's new medical practice. This search revealed an unmet need in the market and Mahmud's wife became our first customer. Our mission from day one has been to empower health care providers to achieve their full potential by equipping them with innovative, clinical, financial, and patient experience software together with integrated, powerful business solutions. Over the last 20 years, this approach has enabled us to grow from serving one internal medicine provider in New Jersey to serving more than 40,000 health care providers across 50 states practicing in more than 7 unique specialties and subspecialties. For our entire team, it's been a really exciting journey, and we're even more enthusiastic about the path that lies ahead.

Next, let's talk for a moment regarding our history of innovation as a company. From the start, technological innovation has been our core focus. In fact, within our first 3 years in business, we had already launched the earliest versions of our integrated electronic health records application, practice management, and revenue cycle management platforms. And over the last 17 years, this integrated product and service portfolio evolved to include industry-leading cloud-based tools that support providers across the entire spectrum of care delivery, together with software tools that optimize the patient experience and solutions that enable health systems to gain actionable insights and drive growth. As Hadi explained, we believe that we are still in the early innings with our sights set squarely on continuing to lead with innovation in the years to come. We have been a leading-edge innovator for 2 decades and will continue to launch new tech-enabled solutions that are designed to empower our users to achieve their full potential, and this, in turn, we believe, will drive continued growth.

Finally, for the benefit of those who are new to our story, let's briefly discuss our entry into the public markets and also explain the history of our preferred stock. We completed our IPO in 2014, and we're listed on NASDAQ under the symbol MTBC. It may not be readily apparent as you view our current 5-year common stock returns, which handily outperformed the major indexes, but as a young nano-cap company at the time, new to the public market, it took some time to find our footing. And as we saw growth capital in 2015, our stock lingered below our IPO price, so we saw the less dilutive alternative to raising capital through our common stock. This gave birth to our 11% Series A Cumulative Redeemable Perpetual Preferred Stock, which was first issued in November 2015, trades under the symbol MTBCP and is presently redeemable at a par value of $25 per share. The initial and other follow-on issuances of this Series A Preferred Stock were key elements that enabled us to continue to invest in growth at what we consider to be a very attractive cost of capital in relative terms.

The Series A Preferred Stock has played a critical role in supporting our historic and rapid growth. However, our current intention, which, of course, is subject to change, is to pivot over time toward a capital structure that reduces the role of our Series A Preferred Stock through exercising our redemption rights when and as appropriate. While the timing and manner of achieving redemption is obviously still to be determined, this will remain one of our key areas of focus as we continue to move forward.

Returning to where we started the conversation. This has been quite a journey, and we're privileged to have an amazing 20 years of innovation and growth as a company. Moreover, we believe that we are very well positioned to continue to be a disruptive innovator and market leader for many decades to come, and we are absolutely convinced that our best days lie ahead. Let's now turn our attention to our financial performance for the third quarter of 2021. And I turn the floor over to our CFO, Bill Korn. Bill?

B
Bill Korn
Chief Financial Officer

Thank you, Steve. As Hadi mentioned, third-quarter 2021 was CareCloud's best quarter ever with record revenue, record adjusted EBITDA, record adjusted debt income, record GAAP net income and even record cash flow from operations. Revenue for the third quarter 2021 was $38.3 million, an increase of $6.7 million or 21% from the third quarter of 2020. Revenue was 12% above our previous all-time high set last quarter. Our annualized revenue run rate is now $150 million, which is 43% above our 2020 revenue and 133% above our 2019 revenue. This is proof that our strategy of growing through a combination of organic and strategic growth continues to allow us to grow revenue significantly faster than the industry.

Third-quarter 2021 GAAP net income was $1.5 million as compared to a net loss of $1.7 million in the same period last year and a net loss of $227,000 in second quarter 2021. While we, as a management team, look at adjusted EBITDA and cash flow from operations as the primary indications of whether our business is growing in a sustainable way, achieving positive GAAP profitability of well over $1 million this quarter, even after including over $3.5 million of non-cash depreciation and amortization expenses is a great milestone showing our progress. Our GAAP net loss was $0.15 per share based on the net loss attributable to common shareholders, which takes into account the preferred stock dividends declared during the quarter. Non-GAAP adjusted net income for third quarter 2021 was a record $6.1 million or $0.41 per share and is calculated using the end-of-period common shares outstanding. Our non-GAAP adjusted net income exceeds the quarterly dividend that we pay to preferred shareholders, which is a metric many investors pay attention to. Since non-GAAP adjusted net income excludes non-cash expenses like depreciation and amortization, it is a good indicator that our steady-state operating cash flow exceeds our dividend payments.

Our third quarter -- our adjusted EBITDA for the third quarter 2021 was $6.7 million or 17% of revenue compared to $4.2 million in the same period last year. Our adjusted EBITDA increased by approximately $2.5 million from Q3 2020, in large part due to cost savings resulting from integrating the businesses we acquired during 2020. Adjusted EBITDA set a new record, growing by 58% from third quarter last year, 18% from our last quarter, and 17% from our previous record.

Revenue for the first 9 months of 2021 was $102.1 million, an increase of 40% compared to the first 9 months of 2020. Revenue for the 9 months of 2021 was just $3 million less than full year revenue for all of 2020 and was $37.7 million greater than full year revenue for 2019. For the first 9 months of 2021, our GAAP net loss was $686,000 compared to a GAAP net loss of $9 million in the first 9 months of 2020. GAAP net loss per share was $0.77 based on the net loss attributable to common shareholders. Non-GAAP adjusted net income for the first 9 months of 2021 was $13.5 million or $0.91 per share. During this period, our adjusted EBITDA was $16 million, an increase of $10.8 million or 210% from $5.2 million in the same period last year. Adjusted EBITDA for the 9 months of 2021 is $5.1 million greater than full year 2020 and $7.9 million greater than full year 2019, reflecting the cost savings from previous acquisitions.

With our first full quarter of revenue from medSR, fraction of clients directly utilizing our technology continues to grow. The vast majority of our revenue, approximately 82% for the first 9 months of 2021, was driven by the use of our technology assets including 50% of our revenue which comes from clients using our electronic health record and practice management software, which is our core technology suite. 22% of our year-to-date revenue is from clients using one component of our technology, such as our business intelligence software or robotic process automation, and 10% of our year-to-date revenue came from clients where we are providing professional IT services, utilizing our technology processes and know-how. Another 7% of our year-to-date revenue came from clients where we're providing just revenue cycle management services, where we are using our technology ourselves, but our clients are not. 9% of our year-to-date revenue is from clients where we are managing their entire medical practice, and approximately 2% of our year-to-date revenue comes from other services. You'll see this revenue breakdown when you read our 10Q, and we believe this will better assist the market in understanding who we actually are, a technology company in the health care space that serves a diverse group of clients in an incredibly large addressable market.

As of September 30, 2021, the company had approximately $9.3 million of cash including restricted cash. During the third quarter of 2021, cash flow from operations was approximately $5.1 million. Our networking capital on September 30, 2021, was approximately $9.9 million. We are proud of the way we've consistently grown our revenue year after year, achieving a 44% compound annual growth rate over the last 4 years. Our preferred stock was a great vehicle to finance this growth without restrictive covenants, achieving a track record a few public companies can achieve.

On September 30, 2021, we had approximately 5.3 million shares of non-convertible Series A Preferred Stock outstanding. These shares pay a monthly cash dividend of approximately $0.23 per share, but now that it is redeemable, we are evaluating several options to start redeeming the preferred stock in ways that are accretive to common stockholders and prepare us for the next stage of our growth.

Finally, no matter how impressive our track record of growing revenue appears, our track record of consistently growing profitability is the real metric investors should pay attention to. We've grown our adjusted EBITDA at a 79% compound annual growth rate over the last 4 years. As the market begins to reflect this growing level of profitability, we are confident we will have opportunities to start redeeming our preferred stock, which will reduce our dividends and increase the earnings available to our common stockholders. We appreciate your patience while we wait for the right time. I'll now turn the floor over to our Chairman, Mahmud, for his concluding comments.

M
Mahmud Haq
Founder and Executive Chairman

Thank you, Bill. It truly is a pleasure to see how we continue to evolve and provide leading technology-enabled business solutions to health care organizations across the country. We are fortunate to continue to be poised for record-breaking growth and profitability. I would like to thank our investors, customers, and employees for their continued support. We will now open the call to questions. Operator?

Operator

[Operator Instructions]. And our first question comes from Jeffrey Cohen in Ladenburg Thalmann & Co.

J
Jeffrey Cohen
Ladenburg Thalmann & Co.

So, I'll limit to 2. So I guess, firstly, for Hadi, could you talk a little bit about this conductor suite and some of its elements and talk specifically about the new markets and new TAM that you were discussing earlier in the call, please. It's unclear to us exactly what new market in TAM that's incremental or separate from current market in TAM?

H
Hadi Chaudhry
Chief Executive Officer, President, and Director

Sure. Thank you, Jeff. Thank you for the question. Just, first of all, to summarize this, CareCloud Conductor, you can consider this to be a family of technologies for interoperability, data exchange, and transformation, and connectivity. Think about it like the Google Workspace or Microsoft Office, like there is a whole suite of products and there are small other elements, such as Microsoft Word, Microsoft Excel, you can even -- can buy the entire suite or you can buy one piece of it. So this is the same -- the whole suite of technology for our in the Conductor and then we keep on launching the product, and the first one is the connector.

From the go-to-market perspective, we are still working on some of the -- to finalize the strategy in terms of the pricing and the website launch and the communication, and we'll be doing later in this quarter. But what it does is -- and if I can share a simple example with you, maybe that can help you understand what this will work. Let's say there is a vendor in an ABC EHR company, they need to create an interface with lab on one side with, for example, LabCorp, with Quest, at the same time, have to connect and create another interface with another billing system or another different vendor. So in today's world, they need to be developing individually with LabCorp, with Quest, different specification and requirement for LabCorp, different specification and requirement for Quest and so and so on. So with Conductor, based on my last 20 years of experience, we have created a lot of interfaces with different labs, we have created a lot of interfaces with many other software vendors, all those, we have created and packaged in the library. And then we have created an application which will give a user interface where they can go not only monitor the interface when they get set up, all which you need to do is create an interface with us, with Connector and then just keep turning on the interfaces that you need. And then the whole time of the development will get eliminated. It already knows what specification is needed if it's in HL7, if it's a proprietary edit that are needed or it's a fire that's needed. So it cuts the time significantly to establish those interfaces and interfaces is just one example. It can be -- and the other -- that we keep on adding other pieces of it that would be our rule-based system CollectiveIQ that will come with a similar context and end concept. So that's the whole ratio and the pieces behind it. Of our experience, our -- the things that -which we use and succeeded over time and internally have optimized the processes and helped us in acquiring and integrating companies. All those now have been converted into a library, and we're going to make it available for other health care vendors in this industry.

J
Jeffrey Cohen
Ladenburg Thalmann & Co.

Okay. That's very helpful. So it sounds like there's a whole lot of ancillary software TAMs associated with the offering. So with that, would that be focused on your current customers? Or do you see a different set of an audience out there as far as larger facilities or more pronounced platforms?

H
Hadi Chaudhry
Chief Executive Officer, President, and Director

And absolutely, and just to give you for -- what we will be -- from the existing customers' point of view, it can be useful for some enterprise-level clients who have their own software or they focus on creating their own, some piece of the software internally. More focused towards the other health care IT vendors, which can include the EHR companies, the practice management companies, and in some cases, even the RCM company. And if you think about even the large system integrators, companies such as Cognizant, Infosys, and many, many, many, many others in that space, and digital health ecosystem partners, new health care or digital health start-up, or solutions that don't want to build all this connectivity by themselves. So this is changing the addressable market for us completely in staying still in the health care space, but a different audience, a different prospects that we will be shooting for.

Operator

Our next question comes from Allen Klee in Maxim Group.

A
Allen Klee
Maxim Group

Can you talk a little about, with your revenue growth this quarter, how to think about how much was organic and how bookings are going?

H
Hadi Chaudhry
Chief Executive Officer, President, and Director

Good question, Allen. In terms of -- as you know, we do not specifically disclose the number on the quarter-to-quarter basis from the sales, organic, or the booking perspective, but it is a combination of our organic growth and the regular revenue from our clients, from the CareCloud group of companies that we kept acquiring and integrating. Bill, would you like to give some more color?

B
Bill Korn
Chief Financial Officer

Sure, Hadi. So yes, Allen, we had a great quarter and I think as you'll start to see as you read the 10Q that comes out this afternoon, we've got a full quarter of revenue from medSR, which was certainly a contributor to growth. But I think we saw increases in revenue throughout -- our general perspective is that in the first quarter or 2 of the year, we all saw that practices were seeing a few less patients than usual. We saw a lot of practices back to full strength, even achieving record volumes of patient billings. So that's been an important aspect of the revenue growth in the quarter.

H
Hadi Chaudhry
Chief Executive Officer, President, and Director

And just to add one quick small thing. So a small fraction could also potentially be a catch-up for those, some of the practices as well. Let's say some of the surgeries that were on hold, now those surgeries have conducted -- have been performed now. So in this quarter, the number of practices we see have seen additional revenue in this quarter due to a part of it or fraction of it is even a catch up there.

A
Allen Klee
Maxim Group

And my second question is, how do you feel about your pipeline of potential M&A?

S
Stephen Snyder
Chief Strategy Officer and Director

Thanks, Allen, for the question. We -- if we step back and think about the thesis that initially drove us to begin focusing on M&A 15, 16 years ago, we think that thesis really holds true, which is that the market, the health care IT and also revenue cycle management markets are both highly fragmented. They continue to be right for consolidation today, just like they were 15 years ago. And of course, we've been on the leading edge as one of the most active acquirers in this space. So from an overall kind of positioning perspective in terms of our approach, it continues to be a very proactive approach, so, as always, we review dozens of companies before we select one that we move forward with. But by the same token, we continue to also be patient and disciplined in our approach, we really do our very best to avoid overpaying for acquisitions, which I think is a key reason we've been able to really identify accretive acquisitions and been able to acquire them at really attractive valuation. So while we, of course, continue not to publicly disclose the acquisition pipeline details and while we continue to really remain focused on the tech innovation, integrating companies we've acquired, and continuing to improve overall efficiencies and profitability, we continue to be focused proactively on identifying those acquisitions. From the perspective, as we think about the market today, we really feel really good about what we're seeing in the market in terms of overall opportunities, but again, we'll wait for the right opportunity. We don't have one that's at a point in time where we will disclose it today, and we'll continue to be patient but diligent as we're looking for it.

Operator

Next question comes from Marc Wiesenberger in B. Riley Securities.

M
Marc Wiesenberger
B. Riley Securities

Can you talk about some of the dynamics of the US labor market and position and other clinical personnel burnout? And then the opportunity with your overseas workforce to address that?

H
Hadi Chaudhry
Chief Executive Officer, President, and Director

Great question, Ron. And then we have called with us to who works the mostly with the booking when it comes to the force, the CareCloud Force deals, and I'll turn the floor over to him in a minute. But to your point, yes, we do see the more and more opportunities in that space, especially in the health system space after the medSR acquisition as we have started to work with more opportunities there. We do see, not only from the burnout perspective even during the COVID era and the post COVID era, the lack of or the shortage of some of the resources of that has opened up more door for us and this 4 steels where we can plug in our right combination of onshore and offshore resources to provide the services on the FTE basis. Karl, would you like to add some more details here, please?

K
Karl Johnson

Thank you, Hadi. Happy to add a little more color here. So certainly, what we've seen in large integrated delivery systems as people are looking for employees to return back to the office, physically, hospitals are requiring across the board vaccinations. Many people are choosing not to be vaccinated and thus not returning to work. The second thing that's played into it is just an increased opportunity for people to work remotely and where hospitals, large organizations are looking for people to be on-site, has created a big interest in Force. So we've already been picking up a number of opportunities where we're able to come in and backfill. We're able to, number one, work on people's host systems, and that can be everything from Epic on the high end to eclinical works on the lower end to our own systems. On top of that, we can provide that workforce that can start in 30 days, the last deal we did started in less than ten days. And so we're able to provide FTEs that are already trained, already working in their system, and able to provide that. So we think that that has been a big plus for Force, but I would also take it a step further and say that it's a similar problem in smaller and medium-sized practices who are unable to find revenue cycle, people, medical billers, and that's created an increased interest in our RCM back-office services, both in the CareCloud product line and in other people's systems. Thank you. Hope that helps.

M
Marc Wiesenberger
B. Riley Securities

Very helpful, thank you. And then, Bill, I didn't hear any commentary on kind of an updated revenue guide for the think about for the back or for the fourth quarter, with the real strong performance in the third quarter, how should we think about the fourth quarter and relative to what you previously provided as the top line range? Thank you.

B
Bill Korn
Chief Financial Officer

Good question. We've decided at this point not to specifically talk about the updated revenue guidance. And I say we feel really strong. We had a great set of results for the quarter. We're confident we're going to have a blowout year, but we felt like this close to the end of the year, we didn't really need to adjust specific numbers.

Operator

Next question from Richard Baldry in ROTH Capital.

R
Richard Baldry
ROTH Capital Partners

I'm sort of curious, I'm not sure if I mistyped in my model or not because It looked like R&D spending was dramatically lower than it had been. So I'm sort of curious, the driver behind that if there's some sort of reversal or accrual? Or if this is a new sustainable level with certain projects completed or something like that?

B
Bill Korn
Chief Financial Officer

Sure, Rich. The R&D number that's there, I think one of the things as we continue to integrate CareCloud and Meridian, as you know, we picked up a great talented team of developers who continue to be putting a lot of work into new products. Now you probably know sort of the GAAP accounting rules for what gets accounted as capitalized R&D expense versus numbers that hit the P&L, so we had some things that sort of cross that boundary, which changed the accounting definition. There was also some hosting of systems that have now gone into production, and so some of that cost actually moved from the R&D line into the direct operating cost line. And I think that as you're forecasting going forward, I would say that you could probably look at third quarter and assume that future quarters, the R&D expense is going to be more in line with third-quarter than it was with first and second. And sort of the opposite side of that is, with some of that hosting cost moved into direct operating cost, you'll see some of that additional expense in the cost line as opposed to the R&D line. Good observation there.

R
Richard Baldry
ROTH Capital Partners

Okay. Maybe a broader question. How will your sales motion sort of alter? Or how are you fine-tuning it? Given you've got a much broader set of products and services now, really sort of a tech versus services sides with RCM and your pro services outsourced abilities. Do you have to revamp sort of how you go to market, which products or which target customers? Is there any meaningful changes to that that could spark faster growth as we go forward on an organic basis? Thanks.

H
Hadi Chaudhry
Chief Executive Officer, President, and Director

Great. Thank you for the question, Richard. If you think about it, and that's a very good question and the point, we started, for the first time, aggressively focusing towards of organic sales initiatives and market initiative last year, sometime in the last year. And we keep on evolving and readjusting and making changes to the overall strategy. And if you think about it more recently when we acquired MedSR, that was also the whole rationale of the thesis behind that acquisition was, yes, one was that nonrecurring revenue that we will be able to add, but more importantly, as in I alluded to earlier, that's giving us a seat at the table in these health system where neither MedSR was in the position before to go and go after those opportunities for recurring revenue RCM deals, neither we were in the position to be reaching out to those opportunity and fight for it. I think now with that acquisition, with the team there and with the recent promotions as we made earlier this year, whether it's the new head of the sales on the MedSR side, this new addition of our Chief Operating Officer, the -- with MedSR. This new team together, those moves are exactly to your point, keeping in view the new addressable market and the more opportunities that we have now that we want to capture. And then in addition to that, we have a number of our internal promotions and the changes we keep on making new team members that have been -- that they have been working in the health care IT space for 15, 20 years, they have been moved into the more senior positions, and the team has been distributed between focusing on each area or different areas of product and the services we have to offer now. And we are very excited, especially with this health system opportunities, the possible opportunities coming., we are already fighting for or participating in number of the RFPs, multimillion-dollar deals, and we are very optimistic about it.

Operator

Our next question comes from Joseph Downing in Cantor Fitzgerald.

J
Joseph Downing
Cantor Fitzgerald & Co.

I'm just sitting in for Steve Halper today. And yes, just broadly speaking, I was wondering if you can give an update on how normalized, just to the operating environment, is with regard to COVID? Anything on patient volumes and how normal everyday business is for these practices? And then, ultimately, how this comes around in effect M&A environment? Are people more willing to sell? Any color there would be helpful.

H
Hadi Chaudhry
Chief Executive Officer, President, and Director

Great. Thank you, Joseph, for the question, and good morning. In terms of the COVID, the volumes are pretty much back to the pre-COVID levels. Even that, as Bill mentioned earlier too, that we still see some uptake in this third quarter, which was sort of the catch-up, and I mentioned that earlier as well, catch-up from the sum of the previous visits that were sort of on hold. So it's back to the -- almost at the pre-COVID level, it can keeps moving up and down slightly on the month-to-month basis, but we see that to be back to a normal situation. And when it comes to -- from the M&A perspective, I will turn the floor over to Steve if you want to add some color. Steve, here, please.

S
Stephen Snyder
Chief Strategy Officer and Director

Sure, I'd be happy to. And Joseph, thanks for the question. So again, from an M&A perspective, our perspective relative to COVID-driven dynamics really is that there's a bit of a dichotomy in the market from our vantage point. On the one side, if you think about healthy, growing, profitable companies in the private market and also public companies at scale, they're obviously seeing historically high valuations. So there's froth in that market for sure, it seems. Now on the other side, if you think about the companies that are really our core focus, have been historically continue to be today, companies that have some element of distress. So they're good companies with good leadership teams but nevertheless, there's something in their existing model that we believe we could enhance through an acquisition. From our vantage point, valuations of companies that would fall into that category, those valuations appear to be relatively flat, albeit deal flow relative to the distressed companies that may be temporarily a little slower. And just to use as a reference point, if you think about on one end of the spectrum, new commercial bankruptcy filings for the 12 months through the end of the second quarter of this year, and they had historic lows. So they might be somewhat counterintuitive, thinking about being in the midst of COVID. But the reality is they hit lows that haven't been seen since Ronald Reagan was President. So clearly, the governmental initiatives, the forgivable PPP loans, predators taking a more pragmatic and flexible view, debt is cheap, dept is available. All those factors have enabled companies that would have otherwise solved an exit sooner to remain in business. So what does all that mean? Obviously, COVID probably has humbled all of us in terms of making real bold predictions about the future, but we really view that as being a bit transitory and believe that will lead to a buyer's market over time. Having said that, we continue to review many opportunities, continue to be very proactive in terms of reviewing those opportunities, continue to feel good about where the market is, but again, from our company's perspective, we'll nevertheless be patient, we'll be disciplined in our approach and really wait for the right acquisition target before we pull the trigger and move forward.

Operator

Next question from Kevin Dede in HCW.

K
Kevin Dede
H.C. Wainwright

Steve, can I ask for your 2 cents, please, on how to rationalize cannibalization here? You've got your core CareCloud, you've got new products that Hadi's introducing, and you got CareCloud Force. It just seems like you got a lot of angles in, what I would consider, a pretty broad market, and it just seems difficult for me to rationalize how do you prioritize each of them when you're looking at customer growth.

S
Stephen Snyder
Chief Strategy Officer and Director

Sure. Yes, I'd be happy to get us started, and then I would love to hear Hadi's thoughts on that as well. And if we kind of step back for a minute, to your point, Kevin, the reality is in terms of the breadth and the depth of our overall solutions is pretty unique in this space. So if you go to HIMSS, you can walk down, when it's in person, you can walk down the aisle at HIMSS, and you can find 30 companies, and those companies individually are just providing one individual aspect of our overall solution. So we have this -- kind of this really -- this rich, deep, broad solution. But if we think about now the market for just a moment, enough though like we are talking about before, even though we couldn't be more excited to have grown from one provider 20 years ago to serving 40,000 providers today. It still means we're only working with maybe one out of every 25 health care providers in the US, so there's still such significant addressable market and opportunities there which I think kind of leads to your question, which is really a question in some respects of excess of opportunities, and how do we prioritize? Obviously, fine-tuning that priority is something that as a team, we're all very focused on. So if you think about now, if you think about Conductor, we think about some of these other solutions and coming back to this concept of is one cannibalized or the other, I think maybe we look at it a little bit differently. Instead, our thought is there's a opportunity with regard to cross-selling and upselling that's really unique as we add additional solutions. So that -- so use MedSR as an example. So as we're working with clients on the MedSR side, providing the traditional types of IT consultation and other related solutions and services, now there's an opportunity to say, well, is there an opportunity for business intelligence? Is there an opportunity for revenue cycle management solutions? How about Conductor? How about something else that can add value to that relationship? So we really see it as an opportunity to be able to upsell and cross-sell, and if we think about the overall sales team, a big part of the reason for that scaling of that expansion and having individuals focus on different areas of the market is really to be able to meet that need head-on, recognizing that it's important to have folks who really know Force, focus on Force like Karl, individuals who really understand selling into MedSR, hence, the Chief Revenue Officer focus only on the MedSR opportunities and other individuals focused on the discrete products and opportunities that we see in the market. And maybe I'll throw the floor over -- toss the ball over to Hadi's court there to fill in some of those gaps.

H
Hadi Chaudhry
Chief Executive Officer, President, and Director

Thank you, Steve. Just to add to some more -- just adding couple of things to your point, Steve. I think Kevin, the way we are looking at this space, and so, first of all, we started from servicing the real small clients, and have continued, started to move towards the bigger and the larger and the enterprise-level clients. And if you think about it, if you -- from an enterprise client standpoint, you need one product for, let's say, a practice management and EMR, then you need some company to help you with interfaces, then you need another company to provide support in terms of the resources. Then an enterprise of the large client probably absolutely need a business intelligence solution, which can help you to take the right business decisions. So all these -- the products and the solution that you're looking for, you end up going to many different companies and then try to interoperate between all that data. So I think our pieces or our one thing is let's try to be a one-stop-shop for these groups as we are starting to hit the large and larger the segment of the industry. And because we are creating this solution in most of the part in an integrated way, it also adds another efficiency level by providing a consolidated, integrated solution versus a separate disintegrated system solutions. So that will be probably another way to look at it, and I think it's -- but your question is the right one, but we are looking at it as a good problem to have and try to just get being more creative and the teams we have, I think we are confident that we can make it work. And just another aspect that I mentioned earlier, there are many things that we have developed and used internally, which became our -- one of, we believe, the differentiator over the last 20 years, such as we started working on creating the direct connects with government peers from the submission standpoint, probably 18 years ago, 19 years ago. And that's one of the very -- that puts us in a very unique position when it comes to those direct connects with many other vendors out there. So now since we already had that had library, why not just package it and start giving it to the other and helping the other health care in the ventures out there which ultimately will also generate a good amount of revenue for us. I hope that answers your question.

K
Kevin Dede
H.C. Wainwright

Yes. Bill, just maybe your insight, please. I appreciated that the graphic you offered on Slide 12, but I was wondering if you could dive in from the hospital service perspective in light of Santa Rosa, MedMatica, and MedSR.

B
Bill Korn
Chief Financial Officer

I wonder whether Jerry, who's with us from medSR , can actually help and talk to you a little bit about what he's seeing because there's lots of exciting stuff that's going on there. Jerry?

J
Jerry Howell
CEO of MedMatica

Sure. So as far as medSR, we've done -- met all of our expectations for this year and are looking forward to continued growth. We have been investing in growth, we've added salespeople., we've kicked off a new brand awareness campaign, and have also developed some enhanced service offerings, all with the idea of going to market, listening to our clients, and bringing them the services that they need. The increased revenue that we hope to see will be primarily as a result of the evolving cross-selling capabilities between medSR and CareCloud -- traditional CareCloud services. We've already signed 2 hospitals where we're providing revenue cycle management services to them. We've got a new behavioral health organization that we've done a total revenue cycle management outsource as well as a handful of at least 2 or 3 new physician groups that are using a variety of CareCloud services. So we expect to continue to evolve our service offerings, increase our revenue as combination of organic growth with our hospital clients, but also increasing the amount of recurring revenue that we're able to put on the books through revenue cycle services that we're now offering our clients. So we've gotten very good traction, as Hadi mentioned earlier, we do have a couple of very significant proposal opportunities that we are responding to now, and hopefully, we should hear by the end of the year, which is really proof that the cross-pollination between the 2 service areas is working because, as Hadi said, and I need to emphasize this, that neither CareCloud nor medSR would have been at the table with some of these large deals if it wasn't for our combined synergies.

K
Kevin Dede
H.C. Wainwright

When I look at Slide 12, then the revenue allocation has broken down on technology and service and not client. I guess that's really sort of where I was going.

B
Bill Korn
Chief Financial Officer

That's right. And the -- you see that the 10% of the revenue year-to-date come from professional services, and a lot of those -- I mean, sort of by definition, you're not seeing a doctor in solo practice, saying "Hey, I want these technology resources. You're seeing bigger practices in hospital". So most of that 10% relates to MedSR, and most of it relates to the larger enterprise clients and hospital business.

Operator

Okay. And we'll take our next question from Michael Galantino in Chapin Davis.

M
Michael Galantino
Chapin Davis

I'm looking for a little more color, either from Hadi or for Steve on the Clarion, CollectiveIQ, and the Conductor slide that you guys talked about. Where do you see that business headed? And what kind of growth do we expect the shareholders out of that segment of your company?

H
Hadi Chaudhry
Chief Executive Officer, President, and Director

So, as I mentioned, just a couple of aspects, and if I go back again to explain the rationale, these are some of our specialty areas that we have been able to develop over the last 20 years. First of all, we've proved it internally that these areas can work successfully. We have resolved those problems for us internally and then help us in many, many integrations of the merging and integration of the companies that we have acquired. So those libraries are the result of the 20 years of work, which is the biggest differentiator. So I think now we have packaged that together and made this package available, if I can, first of all, talk about the Connector product, this Connector will be available for other software vendors out there, you understand, let's say, for a company who may have started 3 years back, a new company, or 5 years back, and they have introduced an EHR. As an EHR, they may have started by creating interfaces with 4 labs, for example. But there are another 20 labs out there, for them, it will take a tremendous amount of time to be able to develop and create interfaces over the next couple of years probably. So all that time gets shortened if they sign up for our product. And when it comes to the pricing, when it comes to our right, the go-to-market strategy, as I mentioned, we are still finalizing some of those details, and we will do a proper launch later in this quarter and sometime during December, and then we will be further communicating and can talk about it further on the next earning calls as well. But we do see from the shareholders' advantage perspective, this is an area where there are other big -- and again, such as an LK who specialized in the interfaces, the data export, import, and the interoperability. So we will be competing -- we will start to compete with those companies as well because of our 20 years of experience packaged together and now the same tools will be available for other vendors to utilize. CollectiveIQ is our rule-based, primarily a rule-based engine, the rule-based system that we have established, developed for the first time, probably 15 years back, and that has helped us to generate industry-leading first time pass rate and keeping and making sure that we submit the team claims. Now the same database, the same -- the library can be used and can be leveraged by other software vendors who do not have such rule-based scrubbing systems available. Again, that's the price point will be different. It will be -- it could be for instance basis, it could be for client basis, there are a number of different ways we are looking at to price the whole product together, which will be communicated.

Operator

Thank you. And I'd like to hand the call back to the speaker today, Kim Blanche.

K
Kimberly Blanche
General Counsel, VP of Compliance & Secretary

We'd like to thank everyone who's joined us on today's call. We truly appreciate your participation and your interest in us as a company, and we look forward to speaking to you again next quarter. Thank you all, and have a great day.

Operator

Thank you. And this does conclude today's conference call. Thank you for your participation, ladies and gentlemen. You may now disconnect.