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TeamViewer AG
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Earnings Call Transcript

Earnings Call Transcript
2023-Q2

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U
Ursula Querette
Head of Investor Relations

Good morning, everyone, and welcome to TeamViewer's Q2 2023 Earnings Call. My name is Ursula Querette, and I'm pleased to host today's call. I am joined by our CEO, Oliver Steil; and our CFO, Michael Wilkens.

Oliver will kick off the presentation by updating you on the business and financial highlights of the second quarter of 2023. In the second part of today's call, Michael will guide you through our Q2 financials in detail. As always, the presentation will be followed by a Q&A session. Please note that, as always, you can find the important notice at the APM disclosure on Slides 2 and 3.

And with that, I hand it over to our CEO, Oliver Steil.

O
Oliver Steil
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you for the introduction, Ursula. Good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining our Q2 2023 earnings call. As always, let me start with a glance at the second quarter of 2023. I think after solid first quarter, we continue to make progress in Q2 in many different ways, not only in terms of business growth and financials, but also in terms of our product offerings, the use cases, our go-to-market approach and just in general, our overall leadership in the marketplace.

Let me start with the numbers first. We saw double-digit topline growth, with revenues up 12% to €154.2 million and billings up 13% at constant currencies in the second quarter. And our adjusted revenue, EBITDA margin came in at 41%, despite additional investments in R&D and marketing, underlining that TeamViewer is a highly profitable company. A strong driver of our success in this quarter was once again the SMB business that showed a strong billings growth of 14% on constant currency. And it's great to see that our core business is so resilient.

To further strengthen our leadership position in the SMB space, we recently launched TeamViewer Remote, which is the next generation of our remote access and support product. And due to the dedicated communication campaign around the launch, we were able to generate additional awareness for the product in Q2. And since our last quarterly call and also since some of you met Michael, Peter and Hendrik in London, we've received very constructive user feedback that we are building upon to continuously optimize the product and improve the offering for our SMB customers.

Not only SMB business showing strong performance in Q2, we also did well in the enterprise business that had a slower first quarter, if you remember. Despite a difficult market environment, we were able to close some larger deals within the quarter, and we successfully replicated use cases across regions and initiated and executed several measures to increase the traction again and to end the quarter with 9% enterprise billings growth on constant currency.

And given the challenging market in the enterprise software industry in general, we believe this is a good achievement, even though we saw a much higher enterprise growth rates in the past for us. In addition to remote connectivity, we are also well positioned to benefit from an increased augmented reality momentum in the market. With Apple recently presenting the new Vision Pro device, we believe that we will see further adoption of AR and mixed-reality technologies across use cases, regions and different industries. And the whole industrial metaverse space is an ongoing innovation play, certainly takes some time and will happen in phases, but we are ready to capitalize on that development.

According to our verticalization approach in the last quarter, we have focused on increasing our footprint in the logistics sector with a dedicated go-to-market strategy for our frontline vision picking solution.

And then lastly, we've added new experienced leaders to our Management Board and Senior Leadership Team. Mei Dent will join the management board as Chief Product and Technology Officer at the end of August, clearly strengthening our focus on product development and innovation and centralizing all technology responsibilities at management board level. And Constanze Backhaus, joined our senior leadership team as Chief Human Resources Officer in mid-July. So she's on board already. Both are, from our perspective, fantastic additions to the team and will help us subbing down on a variety of strategic initiatives and further increase our innovation capabilities.

From my perspective, to sum it up, we achieved double-digit growth in Q2, while focusing on improving TeamViewe across the board with many different activities. And we see that our investments into people, product and marketing are paying off.

Let's have a quick look at the development of our SMB business, which was driving our growth in Q2, similar to Q1 actually. And I will be looking at billings on a constant currency only here. Michael will share the full picture, including revenues later. But as you know, billings are rather an indicator of current trading and business momentum, while revenues are the result of past successes.

So you can clearly see on the left-hand side that after a difficult phase for SMB last year, at the end of 2022, SMB billings came back and continued to grow stronger than actually, I think a lot of people in the market had expected. But we have worked all the time on our SMB product offering and sales and all the marketing channels and on our website, and we are now happy to see the results of these ongoing efforts. And as previously mentioned, plus 14% billings growth on a constant currency in Q2 is really strong.

On the right-hand side, you see the increase in average selling price in our SMB business within one year. Plus 12% in ASP underlines once again our strength in up and cross-selling to our existing customer base as well as demonstrates also our pricing power.

If we go to the next slide, a quick look at Enterprise, you can see the development of our billings here. As I said before, we see plus 9% growth on constant currency in Q2 as a success, given where the market for Enterprise software is at the moment. We told you in Q1 that the slow performance in Enterprise was a temporary weakness, and we worked thoroughly on a number of measures to where we could turn the growth rate around again.

What I explicitly want to highlight is the nice increase in the Enterprise subscriber number. Within one year, we were able to win 29% more Enterprise customers, and are now close to 4,000. Another important topic is upselling from SMB to Enterprise. So if we take a closer look at the billings split for Q2, looking at the chart on the left-hand side, you can see our increased growth momentum in the SMB segment with LTM billings in Q2 2023, up 13% on a year-on-year basis to almost €530 million.

With the largest SMB buckets up 28%, this may come as a slight surprise, but I'd like to take a moment to highlight the development of the smallest SMB bucket here as well. The bucket containing customers with annual contract values below €500 has developed from a development of minus 6% in Q4 2022 to minus 1% in the first quarter of this year and now actually evened out. This is a very good development at the entry level, where we have seen increased competition in the last years, after the COVID spike, if you remember.

Before I continue with the Enterprise development on the right-hand side, let me point out that we once again managed to record a great net upsell from SMB to Enterprise amounting to €22.3 million. Enterprise LTM billings increased by 21% on a year-on-year basis and amounted to €132.6 million. The bucket containing largest deals with annual contract volumes of €200,000 and more returned back to growth from an LTM perspective after decreasing by 6% in the first quarter. And Enterprise growth in general was fueled by some larger yields coming through after we had seen some deal slippage in the last quarter.

And as always, let's look at two recent enterprise deals from the upper bucket and why they are relevant in the grand scheme of things on the next slide. One example is from APAC. We've been able to close the Tensor deal of more than €600,000 in volume. One of the "Big Four" banks in Australia and New Zealand is using our Enterprise connectivity solution to streamline IT support for the more than 40,000 employees.

The main reason why they decided for TeamViewer is our leading security posture and our compliance with all relevant security and privacy requirements. This means that we are well positioned to serve demanding customers from highly regulated industries such as financial services for the healthcare sector, where security of sensitive data is absolute key.

And the other example I want to share with you is Nadro. It's the largest Mexican wholesaler for the healthcare industry. Nadro operates 14 warehouses across the country and recently optimized its product picking using TeamViewer Frontline together with SAP's extended warehouse management software. This led to an improved logistics performance by up to 30%.

We were able to win Nadro as a joint customer based on our SAP partnership by the end of last year. And now in Q2, we saw similar pilot projects with Frontline Vision picking and SAP integration taking place across all regions. And that shows while the sales cycles are quite long and it takes some time, but it's clear that our investments in the SAP partnerships are really starting to pay off now.

Let's now have a dedicated look at our regional performance on the next slide. Billings and revenues increased across all regions in the second quarter with the strongest operational performance in APAC, where billings were up 20% year-on-year at constant currency. A good sign that the recent investments in the organizational structure in that regions are paying off.

The Americas regions where reorganization of the sales team setup has been initiated in Q1 2023, showed the lowest billings growth rate. And this also leads back to longer procurement cycles in the current macroeconomic environment. But clearly, we are driving the reorganization at full force to lead the region back to previous successes. If you look at revenue, the Americas region showed the strongest growth rate with 16% year-on-year. Clearly, this can be explained by currency tailwinds from previous periods, billings converting into revenue. EMEA reported the strongest Q2 billings growth at nearly €79 million, up 14%, and the region contributed 52% of total billings in the second quarter.

Looking at growth drivers, all regions revenues benefited from successful up and cross-sell measures, targeted monetization convenes and an increasing number of multi-deals stemming from a well-developed and loyal customer base.

And with that, I'd like to hand over to Michael for the financial highlights.

M
Michael Wilkens
Chief Financial Officer

Thank you, Oliver, and good morning, and a warm welcome to all of you also from my side. I'm happy to guide you through our financials for the second quarter of 2023. On Slide 12, you see our Q2 revenue of €154 million and our Q2 billings of €151 million. As expected, revenue is higher than billings after a strong Q4 and respective billings converting into revenue this year, supported by currency tailwinds also from last year.

Oliver already mentioned the Q2 growth rates, 12% revenue increase and 13% constant currency billings increase. Our reported billings increase was 11%. Other than last year, we now face headwinds from currency, but we are well prepared. As you know, we hedged part of our adjusted EBITDA, and we based our guidance on last year's average exchange rate for the U.S. dollar, for example, this was €1.05.

Applying these on Q2 revenue and billings, both would be slightly higher as shown in the footnote. The ARR, which is the LTM figure and annualizes the billings value of active contracts increased by 13% year-over-year. Our LTM net retention rate remained strong at 109% on group level and is up 8 percentage points year-over-year. Compared to last quarter, it is up 2 percentage points.

This is clearly a sign for a sustained high customer satisfaction with our products. I'm aware some of you pointed out that this number is influenced by our multiyear deal activity. So we adjusted the multiyear deal effect, which leads to 103% NRR and ARR for Q2 LTM bills.

In Q2, the adjusted EBITDA increased by 7% to €64 million. This translates into an adjusted EBITDA margin of 41%, which is well in line with our guided full-year margin of around 40%. Let me assure you, while we invest into our growth, we managed our cost base prudently. And we told you in Q1, there would be some catch-up effects in Q2. I will talk about cost in more detail later in my presentation.

In Q2, our levered free cash flow grew by a strong 68%, which resulted in €47 million and a consistently high cash conversion rate of 74%. The adjusted EPS grew by 26% to €0.22 year-over-year. Let's first have a closer look on quarterly sequential developments globally and for SMB and Enterprise. I already explained our global revenue, billings and margin growth and the influence of currency.

Let us have a closer look at the bottom right side of this chart, new business, the development of which needs to be seen in the light of still challenging macro environment and our ongoing sales reorganization in the Americas region. New business activity in Q2 was slightly below Q1, although in percent of total billings, it increased even from 8% to 9%.

Let me remind you, our definition of net new is quite strict. We only count a customer as new when there were no billings in the prior LTM period. For example, the large Australian deal, which Oliver just mentioned, derived from an existing relationship, although with a very small ACV before the renewal.

It goes without saying that we are not happy with our new business development yet. We have initiated several measures for a reacceleration to name just a few. Our intensified engagement with channel partners through TeamUP, a stronger verticalized sales approach and the replication of successful use cases with new customers.

Let's move to the next slide, please, and look at our core SMB business, where the strong momentum from the last quarter carries on, as Oliver already highlighted. Slide 14 depicts a strong SMB business with a nicely growing subscriber base over the last quarters, while churn remains rather stable. The ASP continued to grow to an average selling price of €840 per SMB customer as of Q2 2023. Besides cross and upsell, this development also reflects our price change motion, which we started in Q4 last year. We are currently assessing which follow-up measures we will take starting in Q4 this year. The quarterly revenue and billings or more specifically, the respective growth rates will reflect a reaccelerated SMB business.

With the recent launch of TeamViewer Remote, we underpinned our leadership position in that space even more. SMB revenue grew by 9% to €125 million in Q2, billings were up 12% to €122 million or 14% on constant currencies. Please be reminded that the SMB billings also include multiyear deals.

By the way, since start of this year, the effect of multiyear deals are considered more precise in our revenue split calculation. The comparable figures and the respective growth rates were adjusted accordingly, which is already reflected in the upper left chart. You can find a more detailed description of our refined revenue split methodology in the appendix.

Next slide, please. Of course, the refined split also applies to the enterprise revenue, which grew by 25% to €29 million in Q2. As you already saw, in Q2, we executed well in our enterprise growth plan again, after a slow start to the year and despite a difficult market environment. So billings were up 7% to €29 million or 9% on constant currencies. And I can tell you that we are all pushing hard to accelerate that growth in the months to come. The fact that our enterprise customer base increased by 29% in the last 12 months is a positive sign in that context.

Before we turn to the next page, let me draw your attention to the enterprise NRR, which well reflects our current situation. While in Q2, it was lower year-over-year at 111%, it increased over Q1 by 2 percentage points.

Let's have a closer look at our cost base. Recurring costs consisting of cost of sales and total OpEx increased by 16% in Q2. Around half of the absolute cost increase of €12.3 million was mainly personnel related, but let's have a look at some of the cost drivers in more detail. As a significant portion of our sales force is based outside of the euro area, sales costs benefited from currency effects, which overcompensated the effects of increased FTE costs and higher volume levels.

Like in Q2 2022, the largest portion of the marketing costs was made up of sponsorships. As expected and shared with you before, marketing costs also increased due to targeted marketing measures in connection with the introduction of our TeamViewer Remote launch.

Let me give you some additional color on the Manchester United Sponsorship. You probably all saw the new kit with TeamViewer on the shirt front. While this was presented at the end of June, the clubs focused sales process for a new long-term shirt front partner continues. And we have decided that once such a new sponsor is found and Manchester United exercises its option, we will let €35 million of the respective savings drop through to the adjusted EBITDA on a full-year basis. The remainder of the savings will be reallocated to other marketing measures, which Pete and his team already work on.

We also told you before that we continue to invest into our future product offering which is reflected in the 18% increase of R&D costs. While G&A costs were influenced by the centralization of training and GDPR teams against positive one-off effects the year before, the other item was positively impacted by a gain from U.S. dollar hedges.

Next slide, please. The table on Slide 17 dives deeper into our different profitability metrics, starting with the adjusted EBITDA. I already explained the 7% increase in that before. Now deducting a decreased amount of non-recurring items fueled our unadjusted EBITDA, which is 13% higher year-over-year. The decrease in non-recurring items was mainly due to reduced IFRS charges, more specifically M&A-related vestings coming to an end. With just slightly increased G&A expenses and a significantly improved financial results, the profit before tax grew much stronger at 79% year-over-year.

Let's briefly look at the tax item. As you can see, income taxes decreased by 88% in Q2 compared to last year. This is due to an improved tax scheme, which we have been working on for some time. With the formal resolution taken in April, we decided to implement a profit and loss transfer agreement by which a future taxable profit at the level of TeamViewer SE is now being assumed.

This allowed for a corresponding capitalization of existing tax loss and interest carryforwards for the first time in Q2 2023, resulting in a Q2 tax rate of only 3%. The full-year 2023 tax rate is expected in the high 20s. And beyond 2023, we expect a tax rate in the low 30s, which is a significant improvement from the low 40s levels we show – that we saw in the last two years.

Due to this tax effect, the Q2 net income almost tripled year-over-year to €34 million. Our earnings per share increased even stronger from €0.06 to €0.20, which in addition reflects the reduced share count following our share buybacks. The adjusted EPS, which mainly adjusts for non-recurring items and PPA amortization increased by 26%. In Q2, we also adjusted the positive one-off effects from the new tax structure, which related to prior years.

Next slide, please, which reflects our highly cash-generative business model. In Q2, our pretax operating cash flow increased by 30% year-over-year reflecting our growing operations and positive net working capital effects. The pretax unlevered free cash flow and the levered free cash flow increased even stronger by 37% and 68%, respectively.

Reasons are a decreasing amount of CapEx and lower interest paid plus favorable timing effects in lease payments and cash tax. The resulting cash conversion rates were 93% for the pretax unlevered and 74% for the levered free cash flow and hence, significantly higher compared to last year.

Let's move from cash flow to cash position. On Slide 19, you can see that cash and cash equivalents stood at €72 million at the end of Q2 2023. This is a very comfortable cash position considering we bought back €77 million worth of shares and repaid €100 million of debt since the start of the year. Netting this cash position and total financial liabilities brings us to a net debt position of €462 million at the end of Q2.

Since the beginning of this year, we calculate our leverage ratio on adjusted revenue EBITDA and on adjusted billings EBITDA, because our capital allocation target was originally based on the latter. With 1.5x net financial liabilities over adjusted billings, EBITDA, we are fully in line with our capital allocation target. The respective revenue EBITDA leverage ratio is at 1.9x.

I just mentioned share buybacks in the volume of €77 million. This indicates that the first tranche of our 2023 program in the amount of €75 million was completed within Q2 and the second tranche started. We also canceled a portion of the treasury shares previously acquired, which resulted in a reduction of our share capital to €180 million or 100 million shares – 180 million shares. The debt maturity profile has not changed since the end of Q1.

So let's move to my last slide, where I want to reiterate our guidance. After six months into the year and despite a difficult market environment, we already have €305.5 million of revenue in the books. This corresponds to a growth rate of 12%, which is well in line with our communicated full-year growth range. We, therefore, confirm our annual revenue guidance, expecting growth within a range of 10% to 14% for 2023 and IFRS revenue in a range between €620 million and €645 million.

This will be achieved on the back of a strengthened SMB business and continued execution of our enterprise growth plan. Combining the first two quarters of the year brings us to an adjusted EBITDA margin of 42% for H1 2023. While we are continuing to invest into people, product and marketing, we are also confident to reach our adjusted EBITDA margin target of around 40% for 2023.

With that, I would like to end the presentation. Thank you all very much for your attention. We now look forward to your questions. Operator, back to you.

Operator

[Operator Instructions] And we have the first question from James Goodman with Barclays. Please go ahead.

J
James Goodman
Barclays

Yes, morning. Thank you. My main question is just on the H2 outlook and whether you can talk us through a little bit your thinking there around the phase in Q3 to Q4. I guess there's a couple of sub-questions in that. You mentioned already pricing that you'll reconsider as you get towards the end of the year, what you're going to do there. But if you can help us with the parameters of what you might do given how much pricing has helped so far and given that annualizes, I think, at the end of Q3?

And then secondly, within this, the Enterprise performance much better this quarter, but I think it was an easier comp, and I'm wondering if there's, in your view, a real underlying stabilization there or not, whether you've seen slip deals from last quarter to close? Or what really the implications are there for the enterprise business as we go through the second half? Thank you.

M
Michael Wilkens
Chief Financial Officer

Yes, James, let me start with the first question on the H2 outlook. As I said already, pricing was, of course, very strong in Q4, as Q4 last year was a super strong quarter anyhow. So we have not decided yet how we move into Q4 this year. And the Q3 pricing is well underway as we speak. Of course, we don't see also not very much increasing churn rate. However, in total, if you balance H1 versus H2, H1 should be looked at a little bit more stronger given the very strong performance in Q4 last year.

With regard to the Enterprise, yes, indeed, we see stabilization, a couple of slipped deals from Q1, came in, in Q2, which is nice. We also saw some slipped deals now in Q2 into Q3 where we are working on, and we are confident so the pipe of Q3 and Q4 is building up nicely for both of the quarters, very important to mention, as we all know, Enterprise is always back-end loaded. We obviously also work, and we see very nice development in the pipeline building from our partnership, especially with SAP and Siemens. And this is building up. Of course, in the end, it's all about the execution.

And a very, very important point is our overall AMS turnaround, which we mentioned. And Georg at least needs two quarters, he started in March. So he needs another quarter, but he has now done a lot of changes already into the business. He's working way more collaborative with the other regions. So we believe that because of many, many changes now being taking place and ongoing that we will also see an even more strength in pipeline as we will. This would be my answer.

O
Oliver Steil
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Yes. Just to add, I think in general, if you look back at the last years, we have a tendency in the business to have it not just because of enterprise, but slight seasonality towards the second half of the year. Typically, we have tough comps in Q1 and then the first half of the year is always a little bit slower organizationally Q3, Q4, mostly stronger, especially when we come back from summer. And I think with all the trends initiatives and indications that Michael just mentioned, I would be surprised if that's not again the same story this year.

J
James Goodman
Barclays

Yes, understood. Thank you for the detail.

Operator

The next question is from the line of Mohammed Moawalla from Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead.

M
Mohammed Moawalla
Goldman Sachs

Great. Thank you. Good morning, Oliver, Michael. Two for me. Firstly, when you think about sort of the second half in the SMB, when do you start to expect to see some of the impact of TeamViewer Remote? Is it more likely to be in the back end of H2 or more incremental in 2024, 2025. And related to that, obviously, on SMB, you're going to start to sort of lap some tougher comps. But the good news is the drag from the lower bucket seems to be going away. So how do you sort of think of the SMB growth, particularly into the second half and next year? Can these kind of levels be sustained?

And then the second question was just on the multiyear billings contribution. I know, it was a little bit higher than what we were thinking for the quarter. So is it still on track for €50 million to €60 million for FY2023? Or could it be more kind of towards the upper end of the range? Thank you.

M
Michael Wilkens
Chief Financial Officer

Yes. Let me start with your first question on Remote and when it's kicking in. So first of all, we mentioned that, that was also for us a follow-up on what competitors did. This was a super important that we got this Remote play into our overall equation. And we are very happy with the development. We are – by the way, also received a lot of very constructive customer feedback where we work on and release also new features there, very happy. But as you indicated in your question, I think that we will see positive impact in our numbers rather in 2024, 2025. This is this first one.

The SMB part, especially on the lower end, yes, we are happy that the drag is going away that is important. And as we also did in the past, free-to-pay campaigns, we should assume now since we are continuing with those, but on a way lower dimension that this is now obviously paying off all the investments that we did into marketing, into our web page. Customers obviously understand us better the simplicity of the product explanation is obviously helping – and of course, also some price motions healthy in there. That is important.

And to your third question on the multiyear deals, we are in line. However, this may increase a little bit. So if you would ask me today without full confirmation, but it could end in the rather higher end of what we think for the full-year.

O
Oliver Steil
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Sorry, maybe to add on the TeamViewer Remote. It will also be honestly, quite difficult going forward to single it out. I mean, we make this product available as a new UI/UX with new functionalities for all our customer base case step by step, which is obviously very important, as you point out.

At the same time, though, we now have Peter, with this new organization that he has strengthened quite a bit on board for more than a year. So we see significantly more marketing activities, better campaigning, better user flows.

We also see positive – clearly very positive impact on the brand from our partnerships. So this is also adding. So it's the whole marketing product mix and positioning in the SMB has improved significantly over the last 12 months. And that's what you see.

I mean, we always said we want to reinvigorate our positioning there and our growth, and this is coming into play. And we feel confident that this that we're on a good track there. But yes, there will be tougher comp quarters, and it will not always be at 14% for sure.

M
Mohammed Moawalla
Goldman Sachs

That's great. Thank you, Oliver. Can I just think in a quick follow-up. In terms of the price increases within the SMB ACV of 12%, how much was pure pricing versus mix?

M
Michael Wilkens
Chief Financial Officer

Pricing was from the top of my head rather around €6 million, if I'm not mistaken. So the rest is in the mix.

M
Mohammed Moawalla
Goldman Sachs

Got it. Thank you.

Operator

The next question is from the line of Daria-Ioana Sipos from JPMorgan. Please go ahead.

D
Daria-Ioana Sipos
JPMorgan Chase & Co.

Good morning, and thank you for taking my questions. Two for me, please. Firstly, is there anything we should consider on the cost side in the second half, given the EBITDA strength that we've seen now in Q2 and also in Q1?

And my second question is around the new business development. You mentioned a few measures that you're taking, including engagement with partners, stronger verticalized approach, more successful use case application. Can you give us a bit more detail around what you think the main driver of that is? And is there already sort of early signs that we'll be able to drive an acceleration quarter-on-quarter in the new business development? Thank you.

M
Michael Wilkens
Chief Financial Officer

Yes. Happy to start with the first question, cost on the second half. So first of all, we have given the guidance around 40% for the full year, and we are at 42% in the half year, but you saw 42% first quarter, and 41% second quarter. So even if we would end the year with 41%, this would be in the range around 40%, number one.

Number two, we have some salary increases now kicking in as of July. So this is for the entire FTE base. You must not forget that. And we will obviously also continue to invest also what you have seen from our change in R&D and product may coming on board, we will continue to invest into more R&D features as we did in the first half. This is for us important, also to underpin the growth and the healthy development for 2024.

So with all being said, we feel very comfortable with what we see right now with the cost, despite us obviously managing it the cost piece very well.

O
Oliver Steil
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Yes. Maybe second question, new business development. What are we concretely doing? I mean if you think about the way we run or what we have for the market in terms of Enterprise, on the 1 hand, we have connectivity of devices in the IT space, but also in the operations space.

So connecting machines everywhere across the operations of our customers, which is embedded into the Tensor product, it's actually called Tensor embedded on the one side, and then we have the augmented reality and mixed reality proposition with frontline to support workers. So we keep pushing the development of both very clearly, together with partners also. The AR mixed reality piece is integrated into SAP and into Siemens, and we do co-marketing, co-selling with them.

We visit the respective events to go specifically to certain verticals or logistics manufacturing service after sales and the likes. We also positioned Tensor more strongly even into the embedded space, the OT space. There's also an integration underway with major partners, including also SAP to position this more.

And what we do by this, we have an end-to-end offering to enterprise customers to either support workers or support machines or in combination of both. We do the selling motion together with partners, and we do it more vertical than in the past. And that leads to the buildup of enterprise pipeline that Michael was mentioning across industries and across use cases and that's what's continuing as we go through the year.

And we do see the first successes.

These projects, especially the Frontline Enablement project, they mostly start with a proof-of-value, proof-of-concept or a pilot and scale from there. And I think Nadro is a great example where we landed the pilot or the proof-of-value late last year, and we're now in rollout stages. And as we see already that we're winning more of these smaller pilots with SAP and specifically SAP. We also have quite some likelihood that there will be converting and scaling deals in the remainder of this year and then also in next year.

D
Daria-Ioana Sipos
JPMorgan Chase & Co.

Thank you.

Operator

The next question is from the line of Victor Cheng from Bank of America. Please go ahead.

V
Victor Cheng
Bank of America Merrill Lynch

Morning, and thanks for taking my questions. Three, if I may. I guess, first of all, the TeamViewer Remote, can you give us some color how it's performing in terms of user metrics, how it attracts more account creation or usage in general?

And then secondly, can you provide a rough split across Enterprise and SMB on multiyear deals?

And thirdly, you talked about free-to-pay monetization shrinking over time on – due to other initiatives. Should we still expect roughly 5 million per quarter?

O
Oliver Steil
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Let me start with TeamViewer Remote, maybe and then Michael can do two and three or can also quickly cover the free-to-paid monetization. TeamViewer Remote in general, I mean, it's obviously early days. It's a phase rollout of the product for different segments. The stats, so what we're tracking obviously is the usage is people choosing the new product. Some – quite a few customers need to toggle between the two because they have the older versions installed on many devices out there in the fields. And in order to avoid discontinuity or disruption, they need to manage that in a couple ways.

We do have a very high number of daily active accounts. We have a good share of people using TeamViewer Remote, already. Lots of feedback. New customers obviously like the modern UI, the modern user flow, which is more in tune with other products that you find out there in the market.

Existing customers, sometimes need to find their way through the functionalities, because they have been using TeamViewer since maybe 10 years. So for them, it's quite new. And that is, sometimes also post creating challenges, quite honestly, that is commentary.

Also on the product where people felt we left out or we changed things and flows, which are not optimal for them anymore. So we take this very seriously. We work on that. But I think in January, we feel it's a good uptake if we compare to what other companies have done and launched in over time.

You mentioned one specific metric which is important, which is account creation. Very important to note that TeamViewer Remote is also the beginning of an era where you need to have an account, a registered account in order to do outgoing connection, which is very important to increase the security for all users. And obviously, that's a driver behind account creation.

So this like-for-like comparison wouldn't tell you anything because we're really moving customers to create accounts and everybody who wants to use the new UI/UX for outgoing connection, by definition, it has certain accounts so that it increases, it is a huge number of accounts that are being created up naturally. So I think that's on TeamViewer Remote.

Quickly on commercial block AI, it's part of the business. Michael can quantify the impact. As in the past, we use it in certain phases. We make sure the ecosystem stays more or less stable now with the account creation that I just mentioned that has any way impact on the ecosystem.

But in general, we try to let people onto the platform, use the product, get sticky and then drive the monetization that gives us a few million contribution in one quarter and maybe a bit less or a bit more in the next quarter, but we try to level that out across the year, pretty much like you know, it since years. And maybe Michael can get into the numbers and also in the multi-year question.

M
Michael Wilkens
Chief Financial Officer

Yes. Quicky, the second part of the free-to-paid question on the numbers. So this was in Q2, 4.0-ish million. And to your question, outlook for the remainder of the year, we expect because of the situation, what Oliver just has given, because of the account creation that this business will come down a little bit. But it's for us also in a kind of a normal course of business, so getting customers in and then developing them as they are with us.

And on the multiyear deal for the split, we don't disclose the split on SMB and Enterprise, but what is important for us is, this has become, as we mentioned, very often now, this has become a normal course of business. It's in all of the segments, multiyear deals, which is for us also positive and helpful. And there's also demand in the SMB space for multiyear deals. We have inflationary time.

So if customers can for themselves create planning stability, which for us is also planning stability, they do it, we do it. We actually love it, and we also believe that this will continue. So we are just happy also with the continued multiyear deal development.

V
Victor Cheng
Bank of America Merrill Lynch

Thank you. Very clear. Maybe one quick follow-up on the point on account creation. Does that – with account creation now, does that create better ways to monetize given you have more user data to work with?

M
Michael Wilkens
Chief Financial Officer

Over time, we expect that we will also have more user data to work with, yes, for sure. But one important part is obviously also security for the customer.

V
Victor Cheng
Bank of America Merrill Lynch

Got it. Thank you.

Operator

The next question is from the line of Ben Castillo-Bernaus from BNP Paribas Exane. Please go ahead.

B
Ben Castillo-Bernaus
BNP Paribas Exane

Good morning. Thanks for my questions here. Just a couple. Firstly, on the costs, you're running at roughly €90 million a quarter. You maintain that through H2, you end up on your margin sort of 42%, 44%. So I'm just curious what deliver maybe R&D or marketing projects you have in the pipeline for H2, perhaps you could share some color, beyond just the general salary increase as you mentioned in July that would keep you around that 40% margin for the full year?

And then the second question is around on Slide 8 on the sort of mix within the enterprise buckets of the deal value ACV. We're just seeing sort of the slower growth in the high end, which I think is unusual. How much of that is just the current selling environment being a little bit more challenging to sell those larger deals? Or is this a kind of deliberate perhaps repositioning of your enterprise solution maybe targeting those lower ASPs demand? It would be great for some color there. Thank you.

M
Michael Wilkens
Chief Financial Officer

Yes. Let me start with the first question on costs, and then we continue. So first on the costs, as I said, we have the salary increases kicking in now 1st of July. So that is for the entire FTE base, and this is why costs will run. And we continue also with our investments, especially marketing and R&D, this is where we see the development, which is important for the second half. And this is, when we set the full guidance around 40%, then 41% is also around 40%, and this is why we are for now also a little bit cautious, right? The year is not over, and we want to stick to the guidance where we have been.

On the second part of the question, I'm not sure whether I understood everything. I think you asked about the higher bucket of the enterprise, the 1%. Yes, we see some deals also in bigger sizes kicking in. Oliver mentioned two, there are a few more, but it's obviously also a longer breath in order to make it back to the full equation where we were before, which is maybe normal in the overall challenging times, which we are facing.

O
Oliver Steil
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Yes. Maybe I also not sure I got the question correctly, but I think the general motion out there at the moment is, there are certainly companies that are innovative and they keep investing. They have some business model. They are very profitable. They are embarking on new solutions. And with these companies, you can have larger deals, also larger multiyear deals and very innovative use cases. And that's coming through, for example, the example I gave with the largest traded bank. And obviously, that's an industry where innovation has to happen and funds are available.

So we were successful there and there's many other examples. But there's also the flip side of it. It's like companies being increasingly focusing on cost and cautious and not trying not to overcommit and not committing for longer cycles – longer term. So that's the day-to-day struggle we're going through. And it's on that backdrop where we got back to growth. So that's why we're saying it's quite a good achievement given where the market is at the moment.

B
Ben Castillo-Bernaus
BNP Paribas Exane

Understood. Thank you.

Operator

The next question is from the line of Gianmarco Conti from Deutsche Bank. Please go ahead.

G
Gianmarco Conti
Deutsche Bank

Hi there. Yes, thanks for taking my questions. I have a couple. So maybe we can start talking about what perhaps is the main driver for the lower ASP in the quarter in enterprise. Given your client base in actual terms actually went up. Is the mix going to slow down as you ramp up more volumes of enterprise customers in terms of the ASP?

And my second question is, are you actively pushing for larger, more peer deals in Enterprise? Or is this simply a byproduct of customers requesting it?

O
Oliver Steil
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Yes. Maybe I'll take that. Thanks, Gianni. So main driver enterprise lower ASP, it goes back to my previous answer. It is the market is not in a great state in terms of people investing into technology. So there's many customers that are aware that they need to invest in digital transformation. They are aware that security is increasingly important and they try to cope with this in a way which is requiring the less funds.

And therefore, I think if you go back already in Q3 last year, we started to have a dedicated proposition to take the Tensor product and make it available with less integrations and less features for enterprise – entry-level enterprise customers. And that is influencing the ASP, and therefore, the ASP in over the last periods, is smaller than it was before.

If you go back when we were before interest rate increase and before recession trends, we were – actually it was the opposite. We were winning more on the upper end of the enterprise bucket, because we were moving customers into this €300,000, €400,000, €500,000, €600,000 deal size, which happens still occasionally, but not as regular anymore or not anymore at the moment, I should say.

I think this will turn around. This will revert when the markets open up more, especially in the Americas, we've always seen this. But once we get positive momentum going, customers want bigger deals and they want certainty and they want the long-term OpEx.

So in this sense, in good markets, customers want longer-term bigger investments. Budgets are available. In difficult markets, customers want price stability. So – if we're able to land a bigger deal, yes, it's mostly the customer on enterprise asking for some price stability.

But we'll also take it very clearly. I mean, we like the effect of lower churn and predictability of our business as well, and we try to position longer-term deals to customers and then secure them.

Ideally, multiyear secured with annual payments, but that's an equation, which doesn't often work, because then customers go to their budget and use the budget that they have available to secure the deal for longer time.

G
Gianmarco Conti
Deutsche Bank

Okay. So just a follow-up. I guess, given that you've had a – if I recall correctly in Europe, you were sort of like targeting to grow your enterprise space, you're targeting some customers on the lower end with fewer functionalities, which could be driving the ASP down, which is why you've mentioned that for this quarter. And if I understood that correctly, you're trying to emulate that same sales tactic in Americas.

So should we expect ASP basis to be going down because you're trying to do the same thing in Americas, i.e., piloting those customers that perhaps don't want the full functionalities but want an upgrade. And so, you will still be an uplift in terms of what they're actually paying, but the ASP event of the enterprise bucket will be going down.

O
Oliver Steil
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

No. I am over-interpreting, to be honest. So we started this movement of Tensor with lower functionalities already last year. If you remember, if you recall, Q3 and then especially Q4 and Q1, we had a different business mix. It's very simple. The market out there is more difficult. We come in with more kind of mainstream aggressive offerings that changes the mix of ASP, and that's what you see in the numbers.

So and then in Americas, all of what we're discussing is even more emphasized because of the kind of higher volatility of decisions there. So I wouldn't expect any negative ASP trend from here. Because we're already living in a world now since one or two quarters, two quarters, where we have a different campaign and offering mix, and we don't have the big deals in that number that we had in the past. And if you put all of that together, you get a certain view of ASP. I cannot see why this is going to get weaker from here. I think, if markets will open up, it will probably more come back to where it was in the past.

G
Gianmarco Conti
Deutsche Bank

Understood. Thank you.

Operator

The next question is from the line of Florian Treisch from Kepler Cheuvreux. Please go ahead.

F
Florian Treisch
Kepler Cheuvreux

Yes, thank you very much. Good morning, gentlemen. Two questions I have. The first is again on the lower ASP bucket in SMB and the respective billings growth of flat year-over-year in Q2. You mainly mentioned from my point of view, like internal optimization as you mentioned, a leaner, better setup of your own pace. But looking at the kind of competitive landscape in my impression, at least, the key peer of you is now more aggressively monetizing. Is it also, first of all, a positive growth rate that competition is less intensified than it was, let's say, a year ago?

And then secondly, is it fair to say, looking at like regions like Asia outperforming now again, which is typically a tough market when it comes to price sensitivity that now the client is kind of finally accepting that there is a need for the product and that they are willing to pay for it.

And the second question is around your comment around the ManU-Deal that you want to let a €35 million filtering through the EBITDA line. The question to me is, why not 100%? So you have available funds. You can spend on marketing. So does it mean in kind of turning around that you're underspending today? And do you need the funds? So I'm just struggling a bit why not just 100%. Thank you.

O
Oliver Steil
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Okay. Let me start with the first question on the first topic, SMB. I think yes, correct. Observation is correct. I think, we had in the COVID aftermath, many customers came to us also in the entry-level segment. Many customers went away to not using the product anymore or to lower price competition, and we really had to fight hard to keep those customers on board with kind of the remote access product, pricing proposition in different markets.

We have to improve communication and, and, and – so many things that we had to do to try to kind of create a moat around it, which is tough because it's – this part of the market is more commodity, as we had said multiple times. But when you are competing in this space and you start to monetize yourself like others, I think, also have to do because the market at some point is the market. And if you don't want to have all these three users, then you need to monetize.

Then it evens out a little bit more and then customers compare product quality, functionality, security, posture. And I think we see now that the easy wins or the customers or users that move more easily, they have probably moved or had gone back to a free product and we keep the stable user base with high quality globally across the board.

We always also said that our ecosystem why not growing massively. It's a more healthy ecosystem now because we actively avoided to have all these free users in some countries without accounts where lots of IDs are machine-generated and whatnot and whatnot. So remember, we always said it's a pretty clean base and we are disciplined there. Because we've done that, and we've been there years ago. It was like lots of traffic from countries like Vietnam or so and others. So all of that has balanced out.

Yes, in APAC, you mentioned that we have been much – we are much closer to the customers now. We have offices in all major markets. We position the product more as a premium product also with enterprise and channel partners. We've stripped out some of these very low-end campaigns and free users such as that. And that all gives discipline and a better, higher quality customer subscriber base that we can work with going forward.

Second question is Manchester United. My comment, and then I hand over to Michael. There was a reason we did the Manchester United deal, which is we wanted to drive brand awareness globally for our product, and we see that working, and we will need brand awareness for our products and for our new propositions also going forward.

Just a question of how we do the right mix, and that's why we will, of course, use some of the spends that we're now spending on brand proposition on Manchester United in other means and through other campaigns. And I think, it's a very normal marketing mix evolution over time.

M
Michael Wilkens
Chief Financial Officer

Yes. Just – I mean, Oliver answered it. Just a few add-ons. When we are not the shirt – front shirt sponsor anymore, please do not forget and we always mentioned that we become a global partner for the remaining contract duration. And again, we are a very happy and satisfied partner in the partnership with Manchester United and the global partnership that is for us on a lower level, but still super important. And this obviously is not for free. So parts of today's funds will be invested there, number one.

And number two, only to mention again, we will do then, of course, other differentiated target measurements and brand building on enterprise and SMB and this is also something which you would expect from us.

F
Florian Treisch
Kepler Cheuvreux

Great. Thank you very much.

Operator

Next question is from the line of George Webb from Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead.

G
George Webb
Morgan Stanley

Hi morning. Just a couple of questions to round off on coming back to a couple of the topics we've discussed. So first question, again, coming back to a couple of questions earlier. You talked about confidence on double-digit growth this year. That's reiterated in guidance. Clearly, we've talked about some benefits being in there from the 10% price increase as you started last year.

Keen to hear your high-level thoughts on how you think about pricing as part of the growth mix into the mid-term, how that's evolved. Or perhaps to be specific, if you look at your user behavior and discussions so far this year, do you feel your user base could theoretically tolerate another high single-digit or 10% price increase going into 2024?

And then secondly, talking about the cost structure, you were talking about the Manchester United savings. As you mentioned, the new subscriber billings continue to tick down, have done quite consistently now for the last few years. You are reducing that cost base, including the marketing piece, in particular, as you look to exit that sponsorship.

How do you feel – or what the strategy is going to be to try and to get that subscriber base, that new subscription billings number to tick up again? Are there any specific things you're looking at? Thank you.

O
Oliver Steil
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Yes. So on the pricing side, midterm, I think what we're seeing is a kind of normalization or harmonization of the customer base, subscriber base, I would say. So many of the pricing initiatives we had this year and will have this year and last year. They are clearly quite segment-oriented, because if you remember, years ago, we did the subscription migration.

We had different customers sitting on different price points. We were very cautious in how we migrated them given on their past purchase behavior. And therefore, we had subscription discounts, which are partly a little bit below street price, but in some parts, also significantly below street price.

And the exercise as we go through now, we have been going through is segmenting, analyzing discount, price elasticity, market pricing usage of the product. And based on that, we did, so to say, price adjustments, mostly by reducing discounts. And that could be quite substantial for a single customer or it could also be 0.

So it's a very wide range of things we do, could be a price measure of 0, but could also be 20%, 30%. I think, we were discussing that in the past, how that even – how that worked out and what the average impact was per quarter.

Going forward, if you ask me for a midterm view, we will have a much more harmonized customer base, where customers sit on more comparable price points independent of when they came and how they use the product. And that will then also lead to more general price increases in a smaller order.

So I wouldn't see that going forward. We are in double-digit price increase then, but probably more like 3%, 4%, but more consistently across the customer base versus individual increases on discounts. So that's how I would look at the pricing go forward. So going, I would say, towards a more normal pricing activities and behavior compared to other subscription businesses.

M
Michael Wilkens
Chief Financial Officer

Okay. Let me tackle the second question on the new business. So first of all, and I mentioned it also in the speed, we have a very strict definition of what is a new customer, number one. That is very important. So you must have not been with us for the last 12 months in order to be defined as new, which is very specific.

Number two, yes, we have also very sizable growth in our upsell, which, of course, and the best example is in today's deck. The Australian bank is now a very big 6-digit amount. And before, it was a very tiny amount. And we have customers, for example, with €1,500 of billings and then they move up to €20,000 and €30,000.

This is why maybe another element of the equation, which has to be taken into account. And what I also mentioned is on relative terms, new in share of total billings actually increased in this quarter. That is also not to be forgotten. Will we still work on expanding also our new business? Yes, as Oliver laid out.

G
George Webb
Morgan Stanley

Clear. Thank you.

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, there are no further questions at this time. And with this, we conclude today's conference. Thank you very much for joining, and have a pleasant day. You may now disconnect. Goodbye.