James F. DeSocio
Analyst · Taglich Brothers
Thank you, Roger. We have a lot of great things going on, and I'm excited to provide an update. First, I'd like to address our temporary reduction in revenue volume in Q2. The major contributor to our Q2 revenue results falling short of last year Q2 is the reduction of digital transformation work going up in our professional services revenue line. This reduction corresponds to the timing of our June 1 renewal of our 5-year contract with our largest customer. We use the word temporary intentionally. We have since the signing of the contract rebuilt our backlog with orders in hand that will provide transformation work back to historical levels before the end of Q3. And this backlog of orders and work will take us into Q1 '26 without having to close another major contract and we're not stopping. Our goal is to have an even longer runway of backlog. In addition, we just completed successful testing on a large microfilm conversion project that will add more revenue in Q4 and beyond. Further, as a reminder, our June 1 contract renewal is for 5 years with an additional 5-year extension. That's a very good time horizon for us, but we're not resting there. We are working to expand sales through our other channels. We've had success there in recent years, taking our largest commercial reseller from $250,000 in annual revenue 5 years ago to over $750,000 in annual revenue in 2024. On the SaaS side, we've grown revenues 12.6% in Q2 this year over last year Q2. Frankly, I'm disappointed. I wanted more growth than that. Two of our key target vertical markets have faced their headwinds this year, particularly in Q2. Construction and homebuilding faced stubbornly higher interest rates and the threat of tariffs, causing them to pause major projects. K-12 education is worried about the impacts of cuts to public education. I want to be clear that we're not losing orders but we are experiencing longer lead times on new sales from these factors. A 2-month buy cycle can become 3 or even a bit longer. That said, we are currently seeing renewed activity and we are optimistic that customer decision makers are moving past the early pause button mentality and are seeing that our products save them time, money and provide expanded visibility into their critical performance data. We have modified our messaging to more crisply articulate that now is the time to realize the ROI that our solutions offer. More than ever, I continue to believe that now is the time to invest in sales and marketing to enhance what we do in every aspect of the customer life cycle, from initial messaging, marketing campaigns, sales material and sales process, and nurturing existing customers using a customer success model. Some specific successes including -- include hiring industry and AI subject matter experts. Our enhanced industry expertise in the construction and homebuilding space, specific to payables automation has already resulted in key payables automation win and we have improved our messaging to key buyers in the homebuilding market. Our strength in AI expertise expedites leveraging AI for more wins with customers and accelerated development. Our historical consolidating sales and market spend as a percent of revenue has barely broken into low teens. Usually, fast-growing software companies or SaaS software companies spend 40% or more of revenues on sales and marketing. We're financing our growth out of current cash flow as we have been, and I believe that even with these modest investments, we can take our growth to the next level. Our investment in sales and marketing include identifying partners to expand our partner-based customer acquisition model, our increased infrastructure spending includes the development and implementation resources to programmatically bring on new partners, validate our solutions to the market and then accelerate integration. Our mission is to expand partner ecosystems and happy customers. Further, we're committed to leveraging AI in several ways, which fall into 3 distinct core pillars: one, new features, including AI agents within our solutions; two, marketing and customer support; and three, leveraging existing tools to significantly accelerate our internal development, both in bringing new features to market faster and enhancing the customer user interface and ensuring behind-the-scenes data center efficiencies and compliance. As you can tell from the excitement of my voice, we're at an inflection point after successfully paying off $7.6 million in debt and earnouts the last few years, $6.3 million of that was from cash flow we generated and $1.3 million in equity. We are now positioned to invest in sales and marketing and development as we transform ourselves to grow more rapidly. Our solutions bring ROI efficiencies and executive transparency. On top of that, our implementations are low fit, low change management relative to major players. Our customers win and we win. At this time, I would like to turn the call over to our Chief Financial Officer, Joe Spain. Joe?