Jeff Tangney
Analyst · Ryan Daniels with William Blair, your line is open
Thanks, Perry. And thank you everyone for joining our first earnings call as a public company. We'll begin with a few highlights; First, our top line. I'm pleased to report that we delivered $72.7 million in revenue for the first quarter of our fiscal 2022, an increase of 100% over the same quarter last year. This growth was fueled by our existing clients, as our net revenue retention rate grew to 167% over the trailing 12 month. Medical marketing requires highly specialized information flows and our clients are learning that our network is well built for that purpose. Okay, second, our bottom line was equally strong this quarter, with an adjusted EBITDA margin of 43%. Our reference selling model and third-party ROI studies continue to allow us to both scale and price efficiently. Third, our network continues to grow. As frontline physicians grapple with high case loads and outbreaks, we're proud that our productivity tools have been able to help our e-signature and fax products are record usage this quarter, and we expanded our enterprise telehealth platform to an additional 24,000 U.S. physicians. We now serve over 30% of all U.S. physicians with our paid telehealth offering. Okay, those are the highlights. But since this is our first earnings call, I do want to take a minute step back and provide some broader context on our business and market opportunity. And then I'll end with a couple product spotlights from the quarter. For the past decade, it's been our mission at Doximity to help physicians to be more productive, to provide the best care for their patients. Today, over 80% of all U.S. physicians use our platform. Our Investor Relations site has a short five minute video demo from my Co-Founder here Dr. Nate Gross. If you'd like to see firsthand that we help doctors video call their patients, side and paper work remotely and keep up with medical news. Our interactive platform allows top hospitals and pharmaceutical companies the best brands in medicine to connect efficiently with the right physicians about new treatments, clinical trials and patient referrals. We then measure our client's return on investment or ROI using third-party claims and prescription data. In 2020 U.S. healthcare spent just 28% of its advertising dollars on digital channels per IDC, that's less than half of the 63% share other U.S. industry spent on digital over the same period curry marketer. So we believe healthcare is still under indexed on digital, and in the early innings of a much needed decade long technological shift. Hospital and pharmaceutical marketers are our largest clients, comprising over 80% of our revenue. They generally organized their marketing teams by brand or service line, each with its own budget and decision maker. Landing the first brand at a blue chip client is usually the hardest for us. But then our land and expand sales motion takes hold in two ways. First, we use our ROI results to cross sell the other dozen or so brands within the same client, for example, from vascular surgery to neurosurgery, or from drug A to drug B, with a median ROI of 10:1 for pharmaceutical clients and 13:1 for hospitals, as noted in our S-1, we've had good success selling additional brands. In Q1, we grew our number of brands per existing client by 21% over the prior year. Second, we upsell existing clients' brands and service lines by expanding their audiences and interactive modules. For example, we can add an appointment booking module for hospital referrals, or the ability to request samples from a local pharmaceutical rep. In Q1, we grew our modules per existing client by 20% over the prior year, so our cross sell versus upsell growth was roughly equal. We're founder led mission driven team. And this isn't our first rodeo. Shari, my Co-Founder; Joe our Commercial Head and I all took our last medical app from my dorm room to IPO in 2011. The average tenure of my direct reports is seven years of the company. We believe experience matters in the complex world of health tech and we've each done our 10,000 hours in it many times over. So it's our life's work to build better technology for medicine, to care for those who care for us. Okay, that's our overview. I'd like to turn now to our product spotlight. Last quarter we deployed over 5000 new features and fixes to our site. As a product led company, I'd like to spotlight a couple for you now; Doximity Dialer and Residency Navigator. Doximity Dialer is our cloud based telehealth platform. We launched the product in response to the pandemic and had been selling it since last summer. As highlighted at the top of the call, we expanded our paid telehealth platform by 24,000 physician licenses last quarter, and now serve over 30% of all U.S. physicians with it. In terms of active users, we're proud we grew year-on-year to over 300,000 unique physicians, nurse practitioners and physician assistants who completed virtual visits with us in the quarter. We're a favorite among physicians for ease of use, and a leader in the influential class IT ratings for our ability to integrate easily and reduce patient no shows. While our footprint of unique telehealth providers grew, our number of virtual visits per provider declined year-on-year due to the sharp spike in free usage we saw last year at the start of the pandemic before we added paywalls to our app. Interestingly, we have seen an uptick in daily visits per provider since July 4, likely due to the Delta variant. There's a reminder, we charge for telehealth on a per user basis like Zoom, not on a per visit basis. We also ship dozens of telehealth features this quarter. Here's a sampling. First, we partnered with UpToDate, the leader in evidence based clinical decision support to make it easy for providers to send their patient educational materials and seamlessly look up clinical questions during a virtual visit. Second, we added one tap interpreter access to make it easy for physicians to add an interpreter or a family member if needed. Third, we added wall charts that doctors can show and annotate as they do in an in person visit. We've licensed a library of anatomical images, but many doctors are adding and sharing their own images too. And last, we created a physician named carter badge that appears at the bottom of a patient's screen, which includes the doctors institutional logo, title and credentials. It looks a bit like what a television news anchor might have. And a survey of 1000 patients founded improved physician quality ratings, and help patients remember the physician's name, if follow-ups were needed. As these new features demonstrate, we believe telehealth will develop its own set of unique clinical and privacy features. We'll continue to lean into R&D in this area as we build what we hope will be an industry leading solution. Okay, now let's shift the spotlight to our residency navigator product. In short, we help graduating medical school students decide which residency programs to apply to. It's a difficult choices there are over 4500 different residency programs in the U.S., each with its own unique strengths. It's a major life decision as well as it's a three to five year commitment to working 80 hours per week. To building on the work we already do with U.S. news and world report each year to rank our country's best hospitals. In 2014, we began gathering physician Alumni reviews on residencies. Topics range from research mentors to case volumes to work life balance. In sum, over a 100,000 unique physicians have rated their residency on our site. In addition to Alumni reviews, prospective applicants can filter programs by case volumes, step scores or maps of Alumni. Applicants can also peruse attending CVs to prepare themselves for the interviews. After listening to the 40% of physicians who marry other healthcare professionals for the AMA, we added a couples match feature in Q1. It allows physician couples to each set their own specialty and clinical criteria and find paired residency matches within 10 to 15 miles of each other. It's seen a lot of use. We've also added the ability to filter by cost of living, school quality, and other family friendly attributes, as more graduates broaden their searches outside the major metros. We're proud to help over 90% of new doctors find their first job, and to use our proprietary data sets and insights to help them begin their careers on Doximity. Okay, I'd like to end by thanking my 749 Doximity teammates who've worked so incredibly hard this past year. I believe there's no better work than building something meaningful with people you like. And with this team, I get to do that every day. So thank you. And with that, I'll hand the call over to Anna Bryson to discuss our financial performance and our guidance. Anna?