Joey Levin
Analyst · Goldman Sachs
Yes. Thanks, Eric. So we did -- when making a lot of the changes in Angi, we did, obviously, the easiest stuff first. And maybe I'll break the revenue down in a few buckets. There is the revenue that came with either zero earnings or negative earnings. And that stuff is easy to get rid of especially if it has a bad customer experience or not an ideal customer experience. And you saw a lot of that happen very early in Q4 and Q1. So things like managed projects, the more complex services which we discontinued or other channels where we were doing unprofitable revenue. That's relatively straightforward, and I think we've cleaned up all of that. The second bucket, and I think we're pretty far along in the second bucket, though not completely, the second bucket is where we were bringing service professionals onto the platform that weren't really well set up for the platform. And so really didn't end up covering their sales costs. And that meant they turned too quickly. And we're far along through that. So those folks would have generated some revenue but probably would not have generated profit over the lifetime relative to their sales cost because they didn't stay long enough. The third bucket, which is probably the -- which was what you saw happening in Q2 and where we do still have some work is where we're bringing in demand, we're bringing in revenue. And that revenue -- that demand can generate revenue in the period but can drive higher retention -- or sorry, can drive higher churn among our service professionals or among our homeowners. Meaning that they'll -- that would be detrimental to the lifetime value of that customer experience. And that was really what the focus was of the change in the second half of Q2. And ultimately, what drives all these decisions is are we delivering a great customer experience? Are we delivering a sustainable, durable customer experience, meaning one that is economically viable? And are we able to grow the platform, grow the homeowners and grow the revenues? And that's what drives us from here. I think we are much closer to a healthy place right now. I think it's not impossible that we consider other things we might change or restructure in the context of revenue or demand channels that come in. But I think the first bucket is, as I say, the sort of negative earnings revenue done or zero earnings revenue is done. And the second bucket is pretty far along. And the third bucket, I think, is also pretty far along, but that may be where we still have a little bit of work to do. As far as international, the -- one of the great things about international is we were able to try a lot of different models and able to try that with relatively little sort of outside attention. So each country that we were in, in our main country, they are U.K., France, Germany and Netherlands, in each one of those countries, we started with a different model and a different technology platform. And we learned a lot about each of those models and picked the sort of best parts of each. And the things that we were able to get working in Europe, which we have not yet gotten working in the U.S. but give us great hope is one, something much closer to self-enroll on the service professional side, not 100% self-enroll but much closer to self-enroll on the service professional side, so meaningfully lower sales costs. Two, we made big changes to some demand channels pretty quickly and got past those demand issues. In particular in France, where we were only dependent on the affiliate channel. We really completely redid that. And the last thing from the homeowner experience is double opt-in. So meaning where a customer experience where the homeowner chooses the pro, and the pro chooses the homeowner. And when those two things both together -- both come together as the billing event. And that seems to be working from a product perspective. I don't know yet whether we'll go all the way there in the U.S. on a product, but that product does work, is working in Europe, and it's impressive. The other thing is just getting the hard work done of integration. So we've now got, as we said in the letter, three of the four platforms are integrated, and we're going to integrate the fourth platform soon. And that allows us to operate a lot more efficiently with lower cost and easier platform to innovate on.