Sima Sistani
Analyst · Wolfe Research
Thanks Corey. Good afternoon, everyone. And thank you for joining us today on my very first earnings call as the CEO of WW International. I'd like to thank our Board of Directors, especially Raymond Debbane and Oprah Winfrey, for the opportunity to lead this iconic company at a pivotal time. I joined the company seven weeks ago and have enjoyed digging in with the team across all aspects of our product and business. There's so much to cover, and I want to give you a better opportunity to get to know me. So to help do that, as mentioned in our earnings release, a short video is available in the investor relations section of our website speaking further to my experience, and my decision to join WeightWatchers. But for today, I will focus on an assessment of the business, immediate priorities and thoughts about where we're headed. Amy will then cover our Q1 financial performance and outlook. I've spent the better part of my career building digital communities specifically with empathy at their core. I look at WeightWatchers and I see the original social network, we gather people around a shared interest of health and weight loss. For almost 60 years, we have met the need of members looking for a sustainable way to meet their weight loss goals. It's clear that in the last few years, there has been a shift in consumer sentiment with many differing action on these goals. But we believe we can deliver a product that gives them a renewed desire to address it. WeightWatchers through its experience at the intersection of science and community has been the gold standard in effectiveness. And frankly, still is. The digital product has come a long way. But beyond the inspiring member community found and connect, it has remained largely content and tracking tools, both of which are a commodity on a weight loss journey. 24/7 messaging chat with a coach was a good first step. But the level of coaching found in our workshops, where each week you meet with your coach and a group of like-minded members remains lacking in the digital online experience. What differentiates us is a human connection. Digital tools and features are table stakes, real personal connection. That's the magic. The mix ship to digital was accelerated by the pandemic bringing us to today, where workshop subscribers have come to represent only 16% of the total, meaning nearly 85% of our members are not experiencing our gold standard. I am committed to changing that. WeightWatchers is one of the most trusted brands in the world, people need to get healthy, and weight loss is the first step for many. We have the foundation to deliver results for consumers. But we're trying to do too much and complicated our marketing, and the product and the process. We know how to help people lose weight and get well. Because we've done it for almost 60 years, coaching, accountability and community. We will continue to deliver that with warmth and humanity, utilizing the latest technology. People are begging for simplicity and efficacy in the space. And we can and must deliver that. The company has scaled up investments in the business over the last years. But not all of those investments have delivered impact. There are many paths to growth. However, the organization has been pursuing too many at once, creating complexity and overextending critical products and tech resources. With continuing pressure on our revenue, we will take action to stabilize subscriber trends of our existing offerings while building a platform that will be the foundation for a path to profitable growth. To do so, it was clear to me that structural changes were required to create simplification, drive throughput and ensure accountability. On April 22, we announced a restructuring to simplify and flatten the organization in order to minimize redundant workflows and improve decision making. These actions were primarily focused on reducing layers of executive leadership, with VP and above positions to decrease by about 30%. The organizational realignment combined with real estate is expected to deliver nearly $30 million of savings on an annualized basis. We need to narrow our focus to what we do best, WeightWatchers is the most clinically studied program in the world. And we do weight loss better than any other program. Full stop. We need to focus all of our efforts into advancing this position by building a shared experience that keeps current members engaged and excites new members. So that means we're pulling back on certain initiatives. While many of these were strategically compelling, the investment and resources required were a distraction, and didn't deliver the necessary return. Starting with Digital 360. D 360 was the company's first attempt to bring coaching to digital subscribers and attract a younger demographic, which makes strategic sense. However, as it was designed D 360 did not accomplish these objectives. Engagement in the product was low. Therefore, we will be sunsetting the D 360 products starting in the US and Canada as appropriate, we will upgrade these members for the same rate at their current membership. The decision to sunset serves as an important cultural shift to embracing data informed product development and calibrating quickly off those learnings. We will take the learnings from D 360 and develop a roadmap to bring coaching and community to our digital product in a compelling, holistic way for all members. Our team is focused on creating a new app experience that is streamlined around three pillars, coaching, accountability, and community. This is a process that will take up to 18 months. But there will be quick wins along the way as we improve the core experience through a data informed feature pipeline with a goal to stabilize the business trends in 2022. And to return to member signup growth in 2023. At the same time, in person workshops will become a priority. We are going to tech enable our workshop experience to help coaches better serve our members. The studio is a critical differentiator though the digital experience is part of your every day. It's convenient after all. 20 years in digital community building have taught me that nothing compares to IRL in real life. While end up periods workshop subscribers were down year-over-year n Q1, global in person attendance was up 95% year-over-year, demonstrating the desire to meet in person. With workshop subscribers down by nearly 700,000 since the pandemic, we have a near term opportunity to build back this business. While we work on our improved digital only experience, which notably has remained higher than pre-pandemic levels. We will continue to optimize our studio footprint, particularly the fixed location. We are also committed to investing in our studio team. Effective May 1, all US member facing employees are receiving a wage increase. I believe it's incredibly important for us to not only create an environment that allows people to do their best work, but to bring greater purpose to the employee experience across all areas of the business. These coaches are the touch point to our members, a source of motivation and support, not to mention a critical feedback loop to our product roadmap. As we narrow our focus to what we do best, we are also rationalizing other parts of the business. First, the enablement of our e-commerce platform has been essential to our consumer products business, particularly given the changes and limited accessibility to our studio footprint during the pandemic, which previously had been our primary channel for product sales. But over the last few years, we have also significantly expanded our SKU counts to include products across a variety of wellness categories. However, the 80:20 rule applies here, we see that 80% of our product sales are concentrated on approximately 20% of our SKUs, namely our points friendly snack foods, kitchen tools and scales. Combined with margin pressure, we have decided to scale back our consumer product SKU count, and instead focus on high turn high profit items. Beyond those products, we are evaluating the opportunity to expand WW presence via a high margin licensing model. Second, we are reassessing our growth expectations for Health Solutions channel. Breaking through a B2B2C model has been a challenge. It creates an extra layer not only in tech requirements, but also marketing the last mile to the member. We will continue to serve our partners with a focus on increasing penetration with our existing clients. We continue to be excited about the opportunity to better serve members living with diabetes. We've taken the first steps through our latest food program innovation to better serve this population. 6% of our US members are self-reported as people living with diabetes compared to the 12% prevalence of diabetes among adults with a BMI of over 25. We have a feature roadmap that tailors our core products for people living with diabetes that we believe will attract more members and close the prevalence gap. Before I turn the call over to Amy, I would like to thank Nick Hodgkin for his many contributions the company over the past 10 years in his roles as COO and previously CFO. While the intention of the changes to our leadership team is to simplify and de-matrix the decision making process. I also recognize the personal impact of departing friends and colleagues. The contributions of the impacted employees are immense. And I thank them all for everything they've done for WW. Now to Amy.