Jen Hyman
Analyst · Morgan Stanley. Please proceed with your question
Hi, everyone. Thanks for joining us today. Our team executed very well in Q4 despite a very challenging macro environment, driven by a significant and unanticipated COVID resurgence, event cancellations, as well as offices remaining closed. We exceeded our revenue guidance, exceeded our average revenue per subscriber expectation, grew subscribers 110% year-over-year, and drove better-than-expected bottom line performance. Sale improves our model and we saw it in the strong progression on our gross margins, adjusted EBITDA, and free cash flow throughout 2021. Even better, this momentum continues to carry over into fiscal 2022. Before we move forward, I want to affirm that my top priority as CEO is to bring Rent the Runway to profitability, while continuing to grow our business and the unique value we deliver to our customers. Specifically, we believe that we can produce positive free cash flow with the cash we currently have. We have developed a number of levers we can and are pulling to attain this goal, and we're focused on managing the growth of our business to hit this target. While I'm pleased with our strong growth and anticipate that continuing, I recognize the world for what it is and path to profitability is our number one priority in addition to serving our customers. In 2021, in addition to going public, we had five significant priorities: first, to meet or exceed our financial expectations, which I'm happy to say, we did; second, to broaden our subscription offerings and deliver more value to a growing subscriber base. Throughout 2021, our subscription programs drove increased customer engagement and loyalty. Third, to translate the aforementioned increased value we provided our customers into improved financial performance, namely higher margins, improving ARPU, and higher profit per subscriber. Fourth, to add more technology, automation, and use of data into our warehouses to improve non-transportation fulfillment expenses, which helped us mitigate the impact of industry-wide labor and transportation challenges. And last, to increase the efficiency of our rental product investment by further shifting spend into lower cost channels like consignment and exclusive designs that are equally, if not more desired by our customers. The strategic priorities that we put in place are paying off and we believe will continue to positively impact our top and bottom line in 2022. I want to thank our team who stayed focused throughout this very challenging time and delivered on some incredible improvements, which we believe set Rent the Runway up for an even bigger future. I'd like to provide a bit more context around these accomplishments. First, on our subscription plans and how they translated into financial value for us. Last year, we completed the full rollout of our personalized subscription programs. These plans are built to give our subscribers complete flexibility in how they use their chosen plan. The result has been that customers increased spend per month and retained longer. As an example, a subscriber who needs an extra outfit in a given month can now seamlessly add additional paid items into their subscription and can upgrade to more shipments per month, which increases the value to them and increases their value to us. In Q4 2021, over 30% of our subs added incremental paid items into their subscription which increased ARPU and improved our profitability. It's clear that our customers are seeing increased value and becoming even more loyal in our new plans. The best example of this is, how even during the Omicron surge, many subscribers who suddenly were sheltering at home chose to pause rather than cancel their subscriptions, which is a great indication of how important Rent the Runway is in our customers' lives. Midway through Q4, our momentum was strong and we had exceeded our active subscriber expectations for the quarter. After the unanticipated impact of Omicron, we ended the quarter with more subscribers who paused than planned. But even then, we saw the strength of add-ons and resell in driving ARPU and revenue. Importantly, the Omicron disruption was short-lived, and we've seen strong momentum as this variant has subsided. As it relates to our fulfillment expenses, we drove innovation within our operation in 2021, which we plan to build upon in 2022 and beyond. This innovation deepens our moat in logistics and enhances our ability to mitigate some of the macro increases in cost of transportation and labor. Within transportation, we launched at-home pickup in nine markets covering a quarter of our subscriber base. At-home pickup is less expensive than shipping with a national carrier, and it greatly improves the customer experience by dramatically simplifying the returns process. On the non-transport cost side, we launched RFID, automation, and other projects, which reduced non-trans fulfillment cost per unit more than 30% year-over-year in fiscal 2021, with room to further reduce over time. And last, regarding increasing the efficiency of our rental product investment, our focus has been on expanding product selection to meet growing demand while reducing use of cash. Happy to say, we did that, via our consignment channel Share by RTR, we significantly reduced the amount of cash spent upfront, which allows us to acquire more overall product at low risk given payments are largely performance based. Via Exclusive Designs, we use our data advantage to develop collections with our designer partners that our customers love are around 50% lower cost than wholesale and have higher ROI than other styles on our sites. In 2021, we drove these non-wholesale channels to represent 55% of our rental product acquisition. In addition, we continued to advance our garment science expertise, and our 2021 initiative showed a 30% reduction in the product deactivation rate year-over-year, which means we are extending the useful life of units and will lead to fewer total units needing to be procured in the future. Our priority in 2022 is to grow revenue 45% to 50% and to progress on our path to profitability. I view free cash flow profitability as a way station rather than a destination, and I'm confident that Rent the Runway will be a high, free cash flow margin business as well as the high growth business over the long term. We believe the key to attaining free cash flow profitability, then delivering attractive and expanding free cash flow margins is primarily through scale via a higher subscriber count. We've built an OpEx cost base intended to support a multiple of our current subscriber base. We built this OpEx base because we're confident that we will attract a multiple of our current subscriber base over time. While we believe subscriber growth alone can get us to our goals, we are focused on a lot more than subscriber growth. We believe that these other initiatives will get us to our goals faster and can lead to even more attractive long-term margins. One of these other initiatives is to increase the value of our subscription programs and therefore our revenue and loyalty per customer by making it easier for customers to use our service and to discover great products that fit them well. Another key initiative is focused on driving moderate year-over-year improvements in fulfillment expenses as a percent of revenue through increased labor productivity, automation, and use of data and technology in our warehouses. Another key initiative is increasing the efficiency of our rental product investments by shifting a greater percentage of our assortment into consignment and our exclusive designs. We plan to host an Analyst Day over the next year to provide more detail around the concepts I discussed today. And now that COVID rates have subsided we also are looking forward to bringing investors on a regular basis to our distribution facilities to see firsthand the unique and significant moat we've built. In 2022 we plan to continue to execute on our core priorities from 2021 and capitalize on some key trends and investments. We have three key business strategies intended to impact the topline and three impacting the bottom line. I'll start with our strategies related to topline growth and engagement. First, 2022 is expected to be a banner year for special events and we plan to capitalize on it. We think that there will be unprecedented demand for going out clothes and event dressing this year with 2.6 million weddings planned, a new office wardrobe and closets that need a serious refresh after two years at home. We believe that 2022's record number of events can directly translate into extremely attractive and cost-efficient subscriber acquisitions. Over 50% of Rent the Runway's traffic comes to our sites because they have an upcoming occasion and we've proven our ability to convert this would be one-off Renter into a long-term subscriber. As an example, we've successfully positioned our subscription as a value-oriented way to dress for multiple events in a month and are leaning into this more in our marketing. We're increasing the amount of content and creative geared towards events with two to three times the volume across, social, CRM, performance media and SEO-optimized on-site content. We are also focused on strengthening our funnel from onetime rentals into subscription. Second, we will continue to make important investments into our customer experience to make it faster and easier for customers to find clothing they love by improving search and product discovery on our site and app. Because our subscribers visit our app multiple times per week, we want to make it easier for them to browse and find what they're looking for quickly. These efforts are long term in nature, but we believe we can make annual progress to increase customer discovery, acquisition and retention. Third, we plan to improve how well our clothing fits our customers. They are receiving items that won't fit is one of the top reasons why new traffic doesn't convert. We plan to enhance our tools to improve fit confidence and success which should in turn drive conversion. Examples of this include expanding our customer reviews to cover more products and prioritizing the best fitting items for new customers. We introduced a proprietary fit algorithm in 2021 that recommends sizes to customers that are most likely to fit. This has already driven 40% lower fit issues, higher customer satisfaction and fewer customer service calls, amongst customers who take our recommendations. And as our topline scales, we're focused on making our bottom line even more efficient. First, we intend to increase the penetration of at-home pickup and expect more than half of our subscriber base to have the access to at-home pickup by year-end. At-home pickup is an important cost mitigation strategy, against rising transportation costs as we ship shipments towards cheaper and more nimble last mile and regional carriers. Second, we plan to continue to build on top of the technology and automation we put into our facilities in 2021 to drive further productivity gains and reduction in labor costs. Third, we plan to make deeper investments to grow exclusive designs, while maintaining Share by RTR at around 30% of units acquired. For exclusive designs, we have a strong lineup of nearly 20 designer partners around half of which are new for 2022 including Esteban Cortazar, Busayo, Atlein and our first celebrity-designed collection launching later this year. I'm happy to share that we launched our Impact Strategy last month which builds on years of work and has been core to our mission. We conducted a third-party life cycle assessment in 2021 that found that renting close on our platform, drives net environmental savings across, water, energy and carbon emissions compared to purchasing new clothes, even when accounting for shipping, cleaning and our other operations. Based on these findings, we estimate that our model has displaced the need for production of over 1.3 million new garments since 2010. This matters because clothing production accounts for the vast majority of negative environmental impact in the apparel industry. Our Impact Strategy's hero goal is to encourage customers to rent not buy and to displace the need for production of 0.5 million new garments by full year 2026. We also have a goal to divert 90% of waste from landfill from our warehouse operations, which includes continuing to divert 100% of unusable clothing from landfill. Last month we began offsetting 100% of carbon emissions from shipments to and from customers. We have also committed to achieving net-zero carbon emissions by 2040. We plan to report progress against our goals beginning in 2023's annual report. To sum up, we believe we're in the early innings of a huge market for fashion subscription and rental and our goal is to invest behind the strategies that will continue to improve customer value and experience while simultaneously improving our margins. We're excited about the opportunities in the year ahead to grow our business significantly, a back-to-life, back-to-work macro environment that's more conducive for us and the plans we have in place to capitalize on these opportunities. And with that, I'll turn it over to Scarlett.