Bob Whitman
Analyst · William Blair. Your line is open
Thanks, Derek. Hello to everyone. We appreciate you joining us today, we’re really happy to have the opportunity to talk with you. We are really pleased that our second quarter results were strong and even stronger than expected. We believe this again emphasized the strength, quality and durability of Franklin Covey’s value proposition and our strong subscription business model. Specifically, in the second quarter, as you can see in slide three, revenue was strong, driven particularly by the strength and growth of All Access Pass and related sales. Gross margins increased 559 basis points compared to last year’s already strong second quarter. Our operating SG&A declined by $2.4 million. Adjusted EBITDA increased to $5.1 million which is a level $1.1 million or 26% higher than the $4 million of adjusted EBITDA achieved in last year’s strong pre-pandemic second quarter and to the level significantly higher than our expectation of achieving between $1.5 million and $2 million in adjusted EBITDA for the quarter. Our cash flow is also strong. Net cash provided by operating activities year-to-date increased 26% or $4.5 million to $21.9 million, ahead of the $17.4 million achieved in last year’s second -- year-to-date second quarter. And finally, we ended the quarter with approximately $55 million in liquidity, which is up from the $39 million liquidity we had at the start of the pandemic one year ago. So we are pleased to be in this position. I’d like to discuss these results in more detail in just a moment but first some context. This strong and stronger than expected performance reflects the continuation and acceleration of four key trends we discussed in the past three quarters, which continued in this quarter. Specifically, as indicated in slide four, these trends are; first, that the growth of All Access Pass sales has been very strong; second, the All Access Pass related services have continued to be strong and are now even higher than they are very strong levels we had pre-pandemic; third, our international operations have continued to rebound; and fourth, despite continued uncertainty during the first-half of the year, trends in our education business are really encouraging. I’d like to provide a little more detail in each of these trends. First, as expected, the growth of All Access Pass and related sales, which accounts for 83% of our enterprise sales in North America continue to be very strong. As shown in Chart A in slide five, you can see the total company All Access Pass pure subscription sales grew 13% in the second quarter to $17.5 million have grown 14% year-to-date for the first six months and 15% for the total 12 months period at which the entirety of the pandemic to-date to $67 million. In addition, as shown in Chart B, total company All Access Pass amounts invoiced had been growing even faster, growing 16% in the second quarter to $22.5 million and 30% year-to-date to $38.4 million. Importantly, much of this 30% year-to-date growth in All Access Pass invoiced amounts has been added to the balance sheet and will establish the foundation for accelerated sales growth in future quarters. Importantly to us, All Access Pass performance has been strong across all the key elements which we pay attention to. The number of All Access Pass sales to new logos increased meaningfully both in the second quarter and in the latest 12-month. As shown in Chart C our annual revenue retention has continued to exceed 90% and also the sale of multiyear contracts has continued to be strong with our balance of unbilled deferred revenue related to multiyear contracts increasing to $37.4 million as shown in Chart D. Second, the sale of All Access Pass related services which has delivered primarily Live-Online was also very strong in the second quarter. Chart A and slide six shows the strong booking trend for All Access Pass add-on services almost all of which are now being delivered Live-Online. As you can see in Chart C, with the beginning of the pandemic in March of last year, bookings of services delivered live on-site at client locations were necessarily cancelled and the year-over-year dollar volume of services declined with delivered engagements down $6.9 million in North America in the third quarter. However, in the fourth quarter of fiscal 2020, new bookings increased levels nearly equal to those achieved in the fourth quarter of the prior year in ‘19. These strong bookings in turn drove an increase in the dollar volume of services actually delivered. As a result instead of being of off] [ph] $6.9 million as is in the third quarter, the dollar volume of services delivered in the fourth quarter was off only $1.1 million. This same positive trend continued in the first quarter and accelerated in the second quarter with the result that in the second quarter sales were actually higher and year-to-date actually services revenue in North America has exceeded the levels achieved in last year’s second quarter and first six months period pre-pandemic. As shown in Chart B, 92% of our services are now being delivered to clients Live-Online. This is important because with 92% of services are now being delivered Live-Online that momentum can continue regardless of when and whether the organizations return to their offices. Third, as shown in slide seven, performance in our international operations has also strengthened in the second quarter. Sales in China, Japan, Germany and among other international direct offices and licensee partners continue to improve continuing the trend established in both the fourth and first quarters. At the start of the pandemic we had rescheduled substantially all live on-site training engagements in these countries. Since these countries were just starting to sell All Access Pass and therefore did not have a strong base of durable subscription revenue to cushion them, sales in these countries declined significantly compared to the third quarter of fiscal ‘19. Now actually this decline started a little earlier in China in the middle of last year’s second quarter with the onset of the Coronavirus there. As shown in last year’s fourth quarter, while still operating well below the levels achieved in the prior year fourth quarter, sequential sales and sales as a percentage of the prior year in these countries began to improve significantly. Year-over-year sales improved further in the first quarter. We expect the sales in our -- in these operations to continue to strengthen in the second quarter and we are pleased that they did. As shown in the second quarter international sales were ahead of our expectations and just 14% lower than in last year’s second quarter, with most of this decline -- year-over-year decline represented in Japan and U.K., which have had a series of rolling shutdowns in their economy which we expect to strengthen. Importantly, another reason for actually a little bit of the decline is that we are having a good conversion of sales to All Access Pass and that is putting -- instead of putting the revenue into the quarters putting on our balance sheet and this is driving an increase in our balance of deferred revenue internationally that will help to drive some strong sales force growth in the future. Finally, as shown in slide eight, in the education division, despite an educational environment, which is continuing to be very challenging, we have seen a strengthening in the trends of our education business both in the second quarter and year-to-date. The strengthening includes that number one the number of Leader in Me schools, which have renewed or already to renew their Leader in Me membership increased to 1,059 during the second quarter, compared to 725 schools at the same time last year. And second, the number of new Leader in Me schools who have contracted by the end of the first quarter or in the process of contracting is almost equal to that achieved in last year’s second quarter pre-pandemic. Just to note that there are also some positive trends in the education market overall despite the challenges which we all know about and we expect these will help our education business during the remainder of this fiscal year and into next fiscal year. These trends include; one, increasing confidence among those in educational community that most schools will be open in the fall of this year, not certain but more confident; second, that is shown on slide nine and is shown on slide nine, the three COVID-19 stimulus bills passed by Congress in March last year December and this March dedicated nearly $200 billion towards stabilizing budgets in K-12 schools with a disproportionate amount of that help coming to Title One schools for Leader in Me is often the strongest; and three, the third trend is that Social-Emotional Learning for students called FCO [ph], which plays to the strength of Leader in Me continues to gain momentum. It importance is being talked about every day in the press. It’s becoming increasingly acquired by districts. Just one more note. To take advantage of the stimulus funding and the FCO movement or Social-Emotional Learning, our education team has added to its positioning efforts helping schools take on the issues of learning recovery and the student and teacher mental wellness, these have become the pressing topics the education community is trying to address and the Leader in Me is really designed to deliver on. Early indicators suggest this expanded position is working well and so we believe these business and market trends will work in our favor, still be a difficult environment this year, but we are confident in the future of our education subscription business. We are being conservative bout our expectation this year and feel good about our ability to meet those. With this context, I’d like to ask -- turn the times to Steve Young and ask him to dive a bit deeper into our performance for the second quarter. Steve?