Categories Earnings Call Transcripts, Technology
Snap, Inc. (SNAP) Q3 2021 Earnings Call Transcript
SNAP Earnings Call - Final Transcript
Snap, Inc. (NYSE: SNAP) Q3 2021 earnings call dated Oct. 21, 2021
Corporate Participants:
Betsy Frank — Senior Director of Investor Relations
Evan Spiegel — Chief Executive Officer
Jeremi Gorman — Chief Business Officer
Derek Andersen — Chief Financial Officer
Analysts:
Rich Greenfield — LightShed Partners — Analyst
Eric Sheridan — Goldman Sachs — Analyst
Ross Sandler — Barclays — Analyst
Doug Anmuth — J.P. Morgan — Analyst
Brent Thill — Jefferies — Analyst
Thomas Champion — Piper Sandler — Analyst
Presentation:
Operator
Good afternoon, everyone, and welcome to Snap Inc’s Third Quarter 2021 Earnings Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] This call will be recorded. Thank you very much.
Betsy Frank, Senior Director of Investor Relations, you may begin.
Betsy Frank — Senior Director of Investor Relations
Thank you, and good afternoon, everyone. Welcome to Snap third quarter 2021 earnings conference call. With us today are Evan Spiegel, Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder; Jeremi Gorman, Chief Business Officer; And Derek Andersen, Chief Financial Officer. Please refer to our Investor Relations website at investor.snap.com to find today’s press release, slides, a copy of our prepared remarks, and our updated investor presentation.
This conference call includes forward-looking statements which are based on our assumptions as of today. Actual results may differ materially from those expressed in these forward-looking statements and we make no obligation to update our disclosures. For more information about factors that may cause actual results to differ materially from forward-looking statements, please refer to the press release we issued today as well as risks described in our most recent Form 10-Q, particularly in the section titled Risk Factors.
Today’s call will include both GAAP and non-GAAP measures. Reconciliations between the two can be found in today’s press release. Please note that when we discuss all of our expense figures, they will exclude stock-based compensation and related payroll taxes, as well as depreciation and amortization and non-recurring charges. Please refer to our filings with the SEC to understand how we calculate any of the metrics discussed on today’s call.
With that, I’d like to turn the call over to Evan.
Evan Spiegel — Chief Executive Officer
Thank you all for joining us. This quarter, we celebrated Snap’s 10-year anniversary and as we reflect on the progress we’ve made over the past decade, we have never been more excited about our future. Boby [Phonetic] and I grew up with social media and we wanted to build something different, a way for people to have fun and express themselves without the permanence and pressure, a public likes and comments. We built a camera to make it easier for people to communicate with close friends and family and express themselves visually. And today, we reach more than 500 million people, including more than 75% of 13 to 34 year old in the United States, Canada, France, the U.K., Australia and the Netherlands.
We have innovated on top of our camera and built augmented reality, content and mapping platforms that each reached hundreds of millions of people. We are now operating our advertising business at scale, providing us with the resources we need to invest in our long-term vision of computing overlaid on the world through our camera, and we are just getting started.
This quarter, we grew daily active users to 306 million, marking our fourth consecutive quarter of more than 20% year-over-year growth. We grew sequentially in North America and Europe, which represent our largest monetization opportunities in the near-and medium term. And we continue to build on our momentum in the Rest of World geographies where we see massive long-term potential. Our DAU and Rest of World represents just 5% of the overall Rest of world smartphone population, which is currently more than 2 billion people and growing. Many of the mixed engagement trends we observed during the pandemic and that we discussed on our last earnings call, have continued through the third quarter. On one hand, while total content viewership and time spent has grown year-over-year, user-generated stories continue to see year-over-year declines in overall time spend. On the other hand, we are seeing quarter-over-quarter improvements in engagement with the Snap Map, story posting, new friend connections and bidirectional communication, and we are cautiously optimistic about the ongoing reductions in pandemic related restrictions worldwide.
We grew our revenue 57% year-over-year to reach $1,067 million, delivering adjusted EBITDA of $174 million and $52 million of free cash flow. While we are excited about the continuing growth of our business and improvement in our cost structure, we missed the lower end of our guidance by $3 million due to a few key factors, including changes to advertising tracking on iOS and macroeconomic factors that have impacted our advertising partners. Our advertising business was disrupted by changes to iOS and tracking that were broadly rolled out by Apple in June and July. While we anticipated some degree of business disruption, the new Apple provided measurement solution did not scale as we had expected, making it more difficult for our advertising partners to measure and manage their ad campaigns for iOS.
We have remained very focused on driving ROI for our advertising partners and we continue to see strong consistent performance on our ad platform based on first-party data and conversion lift studies and are working on building flexible first-party tooling and measurement solution to serve the diverse needs of our advertising partners. This impact was compounded by the ongoing macroeconomic effects of the global pandemic with our advertising partners facing a variety of supply chain interruptions and labor shortages. This in turn reduces their short-term appetite to generate additional customer demand through advertising at a time when their businesses are already supply constrained. The ongoing magnitude and duration of these global supply and labor disruptions are inherently unpredictable and in the meantime, we are focused on supporting our partners in this uncertain environment.
While it is difficult to predict the trajectory of these challenges, the growth of our audience, the adoption of our new products and platforms by our community and the underlying efficacy of our advertising products for performance advertisers gives us confidence in the future of our business and our ability to navigate this environment as we continue to invest in our long-term vision. Augmented reality is one of our most exciting long-term opportunities because it is simultaneously very early in its technological development and already used by hundreds of millions of people. More than 200 million people engaged with AR our every day on Snapchat across a variety of use cases, including entertainment, fashion, education and the arts.
This quarter, SignAll to introduce three AR Lenses teaching Snapchatters how to fingerspell in American Sign Language. We featured a number of community trial lenses to celebrate Fashion Week and we partnered with Sotheby’s to allow Snapchatters to experience Christo and Jeanne-Claude’s artistic rendition of the Arc de Triomphe from anywhere in the world. We are also doubling down on the early successes we have seen, helping people try on clothing, beauty products and accessories with augmented reality and are working closely with partners like Ralph Lauren, MAC Cosmetics and Zenni optical to expand our AR shopping experiences on today’s smartphones.
In the longer-term, we are investing in new ways people can interact with the physical world around them, including using our AR-enabled spectacles. We are thrilled to see the unique experiences our creator community has developed for this new form factor as we iterate on our long-term hardware product roadmap. Our content partners continue to find success on our platform with 15 different partners each reaching over 50 million Snapchatters this quarter. Two of our new Snap Originals launched this quarter, Meme Mom and Honestly Loren, and each reached over 10 million viewers.
We are also introducing more locally relevant content as our community grows worldwide. In France, we partnered with M6, our first major French broadcast partner for entertainment content to bring 400 episodes of their TV shows to Snapchat. In MENA, we partnered with ITP Media Group to bring more than 200 show episodes from some of the region’s biggest and most influential creators. We are very excited about the long-term potential, Spotlight, our newest platform designed to shine a light on the best snaps created by our community. In recent months, we have focused on building the tools and infrastructure to help creators of all kinds thrive on Spotlight. We have reengineered the Spotlight incentive programs reach more creators who are publishing a greater diversity of content in more markets. We are committed to making Spotlight a platform on which professional creators can grow an audience and build a business, and both gifting and the creator marketplace for spotlight are now live. We are extremely pleased to see daily Spotlight submissions more than double when compared to last quarter and are encouraged by ongoing quarter-over-quarter growth in both daily active users of Spotlight and daily time spent per user. We will continue to build Spotlight into a unique entertainment destination for our community and a rewarding creative outlet for people expressing themselves through our camera.
We are also continuing to innovate and improve our products for both our community and our partners. We launched the Places Tray, which allows the 250 million Snapchatters that use the Snap Map each month to save their favorite locations and explore what places are popular among their friends. We expanded our Mini’s offerings to include our first co-watching experience with HBO Max, as well as the new Birthday Mini to provide reminders for Friends birthdays. Our new Run for Office Mini which helps young people run for local office, encourage more than 2 million Snapchatters to explore local election opportunities and more than 45,000 people have nominated a friend to run for office. Profiles now support next generation 3D Bitmoji, letting people express themselves through a variety of options for backgrounds poses and facial expressions.
As we reflect on the past decade, we are fortunate to have grown our business in a favorable economic, regulatory and geopolitical environment. We prioritize growing our business responsibly and sustainably rather than scaling as fast as possible. And our commitment to privacy and empowering self-expression through our camera led us to build our products in a way that we believe enables our future success over the long term. As we look to the future, these fundamental decisions along with the scale we have already achieved in our business and operations, gives us confidence that we have the resilience to maintain our momentum through a changing macro environment.
Now I’ll turn the call over to Jeremi to share more about our business.
Jeremi Gorman — Chief Business Officer
Thanks, Evan. In Q3, we generated total revenue of $1.067 billion, an increase of 57% year-over-year, as we grappled with industry changes to the way advertising is targeted, optimized and measured on iOS that created a more significant impact on our business than we had expected. Despite these challenges, we crossed $1 billion in quarterly revenue for the first time and we remain focused on our long-term opportunity to support our community and advertising partners, which we believe will be driven by three key priorities. First, driving our lines of measurement, ranking and optimization. Second, investing in our sales and marketing functions by continuing to train, hire and built for scale. Third, building innovative ad experiences around video and augmented reality with a focus on commerce. Additionally, we reach valuable and hard to find audience, which continues to grow around the world. Together, we believe that over the long term these factors will allow us to drive performance at scale for businesses around the world.
We are continuing to work through the ongoing changes to digital advertising driven by Apple’s app tracking transparency framework, which was introduced as part of iOS 14.5. We saw meaningful adoption in June and July when Apple pushed all of its users to update to the new version of iOS. Broadly speaking, these changes have upended many of the industry norms and advertiser behaviors that were built on IDFA, Apple’s unique device identifier for advertising over the past decade, which now require a double opt-in by users in order to access directly. As part of these changes, Apple rolled out SKAdNetwork or Scan as a proprietary solution to allow app-based advertisers to continue measuring their advertising on iOS. The initial results we observed using Scan were generally aligned with prior industry standard solutions and we were among the first platforms to lean into this solution and push for widespread industry adoption. However, over time, we saw Scan measurement results diverge meaningfully from the results we observed on other first and third party measurement solutions, making Scan unreliable at a standalone measurement solution.
Furthermore, as our advertising partners have explored and tested Scan solutions, they have serviced a variety of concerns about its limitations. Every advertiser has their own unique fine tune perspective on the optimal parameters to measure ROI for their business, but Scan requires them to use Apple’s fixed definitions of advertisers success. For example, advertisers are no longer able to understand the impact of their unique campaigns based on things like time between viewing an ad and taking an action or the time spent viewing and ad. Additionally, real time campaign and creative management is hindered by extended reporting delays and advertisers are unable to target advertising based on whether or not people have already installed there app. As a result, we have accelerated our focus on developing additional first-party privacy-based solutions to help our advertising partners measure their campaigns effectively.
Our primary solution is advanced conversion, which work seamlessly with our mobile measurement partners and users aggregated privacy safe methodologies to help advertisers understand the impact of Snapchat and their media mix. This solution is now launched for all eligible advertisers and we’re encouraged by the early adoption we’re seeing from apps. Even with the basic features that we have approximately 50% of app advertisers opting in via their media measurement partner or direct integrations. We are excited to invest in both third-party and first-party solutions to provide a richer set of privacy safe tools to our partners to help them measure and optimize their advertising.
We otherwise continue to see strong sustained performance in our app advertising platform as measured by both first-party engagement data and incremental with studies and believe the long-term shift towards privacy safe solutions will be a net benefit to our community and our business. We are working closely with our advertising partners to help them grow their businesses with our large engaged audience. This work will not only address the near-term disruption driven by ATT, but it will also help our partners adapt for long-term privacy-oriented future.
Over the last couple of years, our direct response business has grown at a faster rate than our brand business. This is something in which we are incredibly proud and continue to feel is the right strategy for the long-term. Proving performance and delivering ROI are our top priorities, and we’ve made significant progress over the past several years. As we’ve mentioned, for the past few quarters, TR has grown to comprise over 50% of our business. While this has been a historic strength given the recent ATT changes coupled with Snapchat’s existence as a mobile only platform, our strength in AR has become a more significant headwind in the current environment. However, we still believe that in time every advertiser will be performance advertiser and despite the recent shakeup in the ecosystem driving the AR performance is the right strategy over the long term.
Separate from these IOs related issues, we’ve heard from advertising partners across a wide variety of industries and geographies that they are facing headwinds in their business related to disruptions in global supply chains as well as labor shortages and increasing costs. In turn, we expect this to impact advertising demand in Q4, in particular, as in many cases their businesses do not have the inventory or operational capacity to support incremental demand. We expect that some of these clients may opt to slow their marketing spend given the diminished need to drive incremental demand at a time when their supply chains are not able to operate at peak capacity.
We continue to invest in our sales teams and marketing initiatives in order to support our advertising partners and achieve our long-term revenue and ARPU growth. For example, this quarter, our marketing team launched their Open Your Snapchat campaign, which invites both customers and advertisers to fully dive into Augmented Reality, unlocking hundreds of customer experiences localized to several different markets across the globe. The campaign highlights many of our e-commerce advertiser and B2B relationships.
This week, we rolled out a new ad experience lining the walkway of the Westfield bridge in London, which feature lenses with brands including American Eagle, Ralph Lauren, and the Jordan Brand. While still in early days, we have already seen positive signs of the campaign success, including less and consideration and trust among our 25 to 34-year-old audience. The team also launched Snapchat trends in the quarter, a self-service tool which allows our advertising partners to discover and explore trends across Snapchat so they can find what topics performed well on Snapchat and better engage with our community.
We continue to invest heavily in professional content and video advertising to support our community and advertising partners. For example, we partnered with Hollister to seamlessly integrate customer adds within our new Snap Original Lago Vista. Each episode included three commercials featuring one of the series cast members sporting Hollister gear and the third commercial introduced a new custom Hollister branded augmented reality Lens, which included proms [Phonetic] that Snapchatters could tap to visit the Hollister website. The entire ad experience focused on creating cohesive branding with our Snap Original content, which led to strong view rates and share rates.
We believe that camera and augmented reality represents a most exciting long-term revenue opportunity, particularly as brands start to build always on AR strategies for their business. Augmented reality advertising is a fully immersive experience that is delivering a return on investment for advertisers that is measurable and repeatable, which is encouraging more and more businesses to invest in AR. For example, Ulta Beauty leveraged our GDB pixel purchase optimization for AR to bring unique makeup try-on experiences to Snapchatters, which drove over a 4.5 times higher return on ad spend compared to its campaign optimized per impression. The success of the try-on Lense ultimately encouraged Ulta Beauty to include AT lenses within its long-term business strategy.
We have continued to roll out a number of tools and capabilities to help empower AR commerce on Snapchat. Non only can AR try-on technology drive higher return on ad spend for businesses, but it can also deliver a huge uplift for brands because Snapchatters can visualize what they look like wearing different products. For example, Samsung Watch 3 adopted our AR try-on lens in the U.K. to drive product awareness for its latest wearable technology. The campaign delivered impressive brand with measurement results, including a 23-point lift in product awareness driven by those exposed to the lens.
Now businesses of all sizes are beginning to invest in their own public profile, which gives them a free permanent home on Snapchat, where they can showcase compelling AR experiences and share shoppable products directly within the app. The Department of Culture and Tourism, Abu Dhabi, launched its first official public profile in Q3, which aims to give potential visitor a chance to discover what the UAE’s capital has to offer. The new profile has already driven incremental engagement with Snapchatters. The stories format highlights the destinations many offerings and the AR experiences are an immersive way to explore Abu Dhabi virtually.
One of our top priorities for AR is reducing the barrier to creation and helping brands understand the importance of AR and the value it can drive. One of the ways in which we improving this is through our recent acquisition of Vertebrae, a platform that enables brands and retailers to develop 3D AR asset. Vertebrae’s team and technology will further our AR apparel and 3D asset roadmap by providing the backend platform to create, manage and deploy AR assets. We are offering 3D asset creation as a service to help businesses create AR content at scale and drive business results. This platform will also make it even easier for brands to activate AR shopping experiences on Snapchat. Additionally, we announced a new partnership that will give the WPP and its clients more access to Snap’s AR technology and resources, including classes on how to use AR, creative production and campaign measurement.
We also just announced the launch of our new global creative studio for branded AR called Arcadia, powered by the team of world-class experts that pioneered mobile AR advertising, Arcadia will develop new technology and deliver the most innovated, impactful and effective AR experiences to brand and agency partners. Arcadia will be platform agnostic and develop experiences that can live across different platforms, including the web and app-based AR environment.
Lastly, when brand use a portfolio approach of combining Sponsored AR lenses with Snap ads, they result in higher ROI and lower cost per outcome. For example, Lionsgate spiral campaign utilized Snap Ads, story Ads and lens to generate double-digit lifts and brand awareness and ad awareness and 9 point lift in watching time [Phonetic] When Snapchatters were exposed to multiple products, brand awareness and watching time increased by two times and three times respectively, ultimately reinforcing the value of leveraging our different ad formats together to drive performance and ROI.
In summary, we are working very closely with our advertising partners to build and adapt for the future. While there will be near term monetization challenges related to our direct response business in the macroeconomic environment, we ultimately believe that the best way to retain and build relationships with advertisers is to continuously deliver measurable ROI. We will continue to invest for the long-term and making product and marketplace improvements to help advertisers scale the focused relationships with brands and agencies across verticals and improve our direct response products and measurement solutions for performance centric businesses. Based on the size of our audience, their levels of engagement across our service and our overall opportunity in the growing digital advertising market, we are well positioned to play an important role in driving results for businesses across the world.
And with that, I’d like to turn the call over to Derek.
Derek Andersen — Chief Financial Officer
Thanks, Jeremi. Our Q3 financial results reflect our priorities of growing our community, making focused investments in the future of our business and scaling our operations efficiently in order to drive towards profitability and positive free cash flow. As Evan mentioned earlier, our community grew to 306 million daily active users in Q3, an increase of 57 million or 23% year-over-year. Q3 marks our fourth consecutive quarter of year-over-year growth in excess of 20% and it’s tied with the prior quarter for the highest rate of growth for our community in more than four years.
In North America, DAU grew by 6 million or 7% year-over-year to reach 96 million. And Europe DAU grew by 8 million or 11% year-over-year to reach 80 million. In Rest of World, DAU grew by 43 million or 49% year-over-year to reach 130 million. As we continue to execute against the international growth playbook we laid out at our Investor Day earlier this year, including investments in local language support, local content, local marketing partnerships and support for local creator communities.
Total revenue for Q3 was $1,067 million, an increase of 57% year-over-year. This was $3 million below our guidance range entering the quarter, which primarily reflects headwinds associated with iOS platform policy changes. Direct response advertising has comprised the majority of our business for some time now and has also been growing at relatively higher rates in recent quarters. Due to the impact of changes in the iOS ecosystem that affect optimization and measurement of direct response advertising objectives, the revenue from this portion of our business was approximately flat quarter-over-quarter.
Our brand-focused advertising business was the primary driver of sequential growth in Q3 and remained healthiest in North America during the quarter. In North America, our revenue grew 60% year-over-year in Q3, while ARPU grew 49% year-over-year as we continue to benefit from the significant investments we made in our sales teams and sales support in the prior year. In Europe, revenue grew 49% year-over-year in Q3, while ARPU grew 34% year-over-year. In Rest of World, revenue grew 53% year-over-year in Q3, while ARPU grew 3% year-over-year.
As we’ve indicated in the past, we are continuing to accelerate our investments in sales and sales support beyond North America in order to capture our global ARPU opportunity faster in the years ahead. Given the rapid growth of our community in Rest of World and the relatively early stage of our investments in sales and sales support in this region, Rest of World ARPU is best considered as an output metric at this stage. Average eCPM increased 62% year-over-year in Q3. Rising eCPM relative to the prior year reflects the year-over-year rise in overall demand, a mix shift towards relatively higher eCPMs products, as well as a mix shift towards relatively higher eCPMs regions such as North America. In addition, we have observed sequential and year-over-year increases in the cost per action for our goal-based bidding products, which we attribute to the loss of signals that our advertising partners and previously relied on to measure the impact of their campaigns.
Adoption of our new measurement solutions such as advanced conversions is ongoing, but will take time to be fully adopted. In addition, the ecosystem for measuring advertising returns is continuing to shift with more changes anticipated as part of iOS 15, that are expected to further reduce the availability of certain signals that are currently used broadly as tools for optimization and measurement. Continuing to evolve and adapt our measurement solutions, I mean, the rapidly shifting operating environment is a top priority as we seek to deliver attractive returns on advertising spend for our advertising partners over the long term. The ongoing growth of our community and strong engagement in areas of our application that we have not yet begun to monetize provide confidence in the value of our inventory and platform over the long-term, as we continue to navigate these changes.
Gross margins were 60% in Q3, an increase of approximately 2 percentage points year-over-year and 4 percentage points sequentially, which brings us to the 60% medium-term goal we noted at our Investor Day, much sooner than anticipated. Gross margins may occasionally be volatile as we make investments in the long-term growth of our business as demonstrated by our investments in Spotlight, but we continue to deliver against our goal of driving down our underlying infrastructure unit costs over time to achieve long-term margin expansion. Infrastructure costs per DAU was $0.66 in Q3, down from $0.70 in the prior year, but up from a record low as a public company of $0.62 in the prior quarter. This sequential rise in this metric reflects investments in machine learning to support our direct response advertising business and Spotlight content optimization, as well as investments in support of our overall community growth.
On the content side, we continue to invest in Spotlight and this contributed to year-over-year growth in cost of revenue, but the level of investment declined sequentially, reflecting a full quarter of the new structure for this program to promote more content diversity across categories and regions. We continue to be highly encouraged by the early returns from our investments in Spotlight with daily Spotlight submissions more than doubling compared to the prior quarter and ongoing quarter-over-quarter growth in both daily active users of Spotlight and daily time spent per user. While it is still very early for this new platform, we are excited about the potential for Spotlight to further expand our monetization opportunity in the future. We are particularly pleased that we have been able to continue to invest in spotlight and Discover, while expanding our gross margins year-over-year, which reflects our overall approach of scaling our operations efficiently, while making investments in the future of our business.
Operating expenses were $464 million in Q3, up 37% year-over-year. As expected, our rate of hiring stepped up in Q3. Total employee-related costs were up 31% year-over-year, driven by a 40% increase in full time head count. This reflects ongoing investments in our team as well as the integration of acquisitions made over the past year, which contributed approximately 10 percentage points of the year-over-year growth in full time head count. In addition, we increased our investments in marketing, both sequentially and year-over-year with the launch of the Open Your Snapchat campaign in Q3. Lastly, certain costs that were significantly diminished due to the pandemic related restrictions in the prior year, including travel and event related costs are gradually returning to our cost structure and contributed in part to the year-over-year growth rate of operating expenses.
Adjusted EBITDA was $174 million in Q3, an improvement of $118 million year-over-year as we continued to grow our top line rapidly, while scaling our cost structure efficiently. We delivered adjusted EBITDA leverage of 30% in Q3, as we continue to invest in the future of our business, while making progress towards sustained profitability and positive free cash flow. Net income was negative $72 million in Q3, an improvement of $128 million over the prior year, which reflects the flow through and the $118 million improvement in adjusted EBITDA, as well as $122 million higher gains on investments in the quarter. This was partially offset by $120 million higher stock-based compensation. While headcount growth is the largest driver of this expense, accounting for more than 60% of the year-over-year increase, the impact of long-term retention associated with several acquisitions completed in the last year and the impact of higher payroll related taxes due to our higher stock price were also significant drivers of the year-over-year increase.
While we have continued to grow our team and leverage stock-based compensation strategically to foster an ownership culture and drive long-term retention, we have remain focused on managing these programs responsibly. Total fully diluted shares outstanding grew 4.6% year-over-year in Q3. A significant portion of this year-over-year growth was driven by $1.1 billion of early conversions of our outstanding convertible notes that were completed in Q2 and Q3 of 2021, excluding dilution related to convertible notes, the rate of growth in fully diluted shares outstanding was just 1.3% year-over-year, down from 1.7% in the prior quarter and well below the 3% estimate we shared during our recent Investor Day that was noted to be exclusive of any dilution related to convertible notes.
Free cash flow for Q3 was a positive $52 million or $121 million improvement versus the prior year, driven primarily by the improvement in adjusted EBITDA and noted earlier. We ended the quarter with $3.5 billion in cash and marketable securities, up from $2.7 billion in the prior year, as the proceeds of convertible notes issued over the past year more than offset the investments we have made to grow the business over the same period. As a result of the early conversion of our convertible notes mentioned earlier, we have been able to build our cash position to fund long-term investments, while maintaining a responsible level of overall debt of $2.3 billion in Q3, which is approximately flat year-over-year on an apples-to-apples basis after adjusting for the impact of adopting the new accounting standard for convertible notes. This reflects our approach of managing our balance sheet conservatively and responsibly to support the long-term growth of our business.
Q3 marks our second quarter of positive free cash flow and we are also free cash flow positive on a year-to-date basis, which marks an important milestone for our company as we transition towards self-funding our investments in the future of our business. The progress we have made in expanding our gross margins and balancing our investments and operating costs as we scale our business have enabled us to drive 34% of incremental revenue to the adjusted EBITDA line over the trailing 12 months, which demonstrates the potential for our business to deliver substantial free cash flow generation as we scale our top line over time.
As we look forward to Q4, we face a variety of challenges in the operating environment, including the iOS platform changes as well as macro uncertainty driven by supply chain disruption and labor shortages. The fact that these challenges are largely exogenous makes the provision of guidance particularly challenging and complex. We expect that the measurement and optimization foundations of the digital advertising economy will continue to experience significant changes in the months ahead, including additional disruptions we expect related to the adoption of iOS 15. We are focused on helping our partners navigate these changes, but we still expect these headwinds to continue to impact our business throughout Q4 as the adoption of new measurement solutions will take time. It is still not clear what the longer-term impact of the iOS platform changes may be, and this may not be clear until at least several months or more after the ecosystem stabilizes and advertisers are able to fully implement the new solutions we are developing.
In addition, we are hearing from advertising partners across a wide variety of industries that they are facing disruptions in their supply chains as well as labor shortages. Unfortunately, these changes are occurring during the season when our advertising partners would normally expect their supply chains to be operating at peak capacity and other time when we would otherwise expect peak advertising demand to drive contestation and therefore peak prices in our auction. While it is difficult to predict the duration and magnitude of these macroeconomic factors on the businesses of our partners, we have assumed that these headwinds will persist throughout Q4. When combined with the measurement related headwinds we are seeing in our direct response business, we expect a compounding impact on the level of contestation and pricing in our auction-based ecosystem, relative to what we would otherwise expect during the second half of Q4 in particular.
We currently estimate that DAU will be 316 million to 318 million in Q4, implying year-over-year growth of 19% to 20%. On the monetization side, we currently estimate Q4 revenue will be between $1,165 million and $1,205 million, implying year-over-year growth of between 28% and 32% in Q4. On the expense side, in Q4, we intend to continue to invest in our teams and products to support the long-term growth of our business in order to build on the momentum we have established with our community and our partners. Our estimates for Q4 adjusted EBITDA reflect our revenue guidance and our expected of investment, resulting in a range of $135 million to $175 million for Q4.
Thank you for joining our call today and we will now take your questions.
Questions and Answers:
Operator
[Operator Instructions] The first question comes from Rich Greenfield with LightShed Partners. Please go ahead.
Rich Greenfield — LightShed Partners — Analyst
Hi, thanks for taking the question. I guess, Evan, as you think about it, we’ve assumed that you’d be growing sort of 60% plus in Q4 revenues, if not for I guess Apple and these supply chain issues. Obviously, I know you can’t really comment on or solve the supply chain issues, but I guess as we think about sort of the issues going on with Apple, is getting back to a normal or getting back to sort of normal, is it a quarter away, quarters away, years? And then I think back in March, just sort of related to this, I think at March at an investor conference you sort of talked about your confidence in growing 50% in terms of multi-year revenue growth rate. How confident are you you’ll get back to that, again whether it’s quarter, quarters or years?
Evan Spiegel — Chief Executive Officer
Hey, Rich, thanks so much for the question and I’ll share your disappointment. This has definitely been a frustrating setback for us, but I think over the long term these privacy changes and protecting privacy for users of iOS and and course of the sound track community is really important for the long-term health of the ecosystem and something that we fully support. I think when we saw these changes coming, our primary focus was the performance of our advertising platform in the face of the signal loss. So could we still really drive advertising performance, optimize campaigns, make sure our ads were in front of the right people and we spent the vast majority of our engineering time and effort and energy making sure our ads were still really effective and we did all sorts of revenue back testing to make sure that we could be revenue neutral, and we were really confident on our ability to drive results with our advertising platform despite the signal loss. But I think we really underestimated where the tooling changes. And so what I mean by that specifically is that, advertisers have essentially for a long time now use a set of really sophisticated tool to measure and optimize their campaigns. So that allows them to test out a bunch of different creative and see what’s performing more effectively, so on and so forth. And the big change there was that with these new Apple changes, those tools were essentially rendered blind and in their place Apple released a new product called SKAdNetwork that allows advertisers to measure across different advertising platforms, but without a lot of the flexibility that they’re used to.
So for example, you can only really measure your advertising results using the success parameters that Apple has already defined. The reporting is delayed for a significant period of time and often unavailable if you don’t hit a certain threshold of conversion. It’s very hard to see performance on a creative level. But of course, it does have the benefit of being able to look across different advertising platforms. So what we’ve done is built our own solution called Advanced conversions that allows people to do much more sophisticated things and really get the benefits of a lot of flexibility using the advanced conversions products so they can understand performance at the creative level, optimize for down funnel conversions and things like that, and we’ve been working really hard to make that solution more effective and help advertisers on board. But the obvious challenge with advanced conversions is that it only has Snapchats first-party data. It doesn’t have the benefit of looking across all of the other advertising platform. So what advertisers essentially have to do is use both of those tools, SKAdNetwork and advanced conversions, and the way that they are able to understand the performance of both is by running incrementality testing. For example, that shows you how perform and your advertising is on different platforms. And that process adopting as SKAdNetwork, adopting advanced conversions, running incrementality, testing and really building trust in these new solutions after the tooling you’ve been using for a decade has essentially gone away, that just takes time and it’s really challenging. So we definitely underestimated that impact for advertising partners. We’re working through it. We’ve certainly seen some early signs of success. But it’s going to take a little while.
I think the good thing is that we remain very confident in the underlying performance of our advertising products. And when we look at incrementality testing, when we look at first-party data like on platform swipes or installs, things like that, we see that that those conversions are still happening at similar rates that they did in the past. So I think we can work through the tooling issues. It will take time because they’re new. But the underlying performance of the advertising platform is still very strong.
Derek Andersen — Chief Financial Officer
Hey, Rich, its Derek speaking. I’ll take the second half of your question as it pertains to the long-term growth opportunity of the business. The first thing I’d share here is that we believe the fundamentals of our business are intact and we remain confident in the long-term growth potential of the business. We believe we made significant progress on demonstrating the capacity of our business to drive elevated growth rates over time. So for example, we’ve now exceeded 50% year-over-year growth for five consecutive quarters and we delivered a two-year cumulative average growth rate of 55%. That said, we are seeing significant headwinds heading into Q4, they’re driving a near-term deceleration in our top line, including the iOS, ad changes that Evan just spoke about, as well as the supply chain disruptions in labor market has been.
While the challenges we face in the near term are significant, we believe they are transitory. We believe the fundamentals of our business remain strong. Our community is growing at the fastest rates we have reported in more than four years. We continue to have deep penetration of hard to reach audiences in the most attractive advertising markets in the world and measurement issues aside, our ads continue to drive impact and we continue to have significant opportunities to expand our monetization to more screens within our app in order to grow our ARPU over time. So we continue to be focused on investing in our teams and our products in order to overcome the near-term challenges and is for the long-term growth of our business. Anyway, thanks for the question and I hope that provides some helpful additional context.
Operator
Our next question comes from Eric Sheridan with Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead.
Eric Sheridan — Goldman Sachs — Analyst
Thanks for taking the question. And maybe I’ll follow up on Rich’s broader point and try to narrow it down a little bit. As we look out over the next 12 months, can you give us a little bit of sense of how much of investments needed to be made in some of these solutions to transition the advertising industry in your advertiser base to where you want them to go? And maybe drill down a little bit deeper in terms of duration of what it would take to prove out on some of the additional solutions for folks to get more comfort in measurement and attribution over the medium to long-term? Thanks so much.
Jeremi Gorman — Chief Business Officer
Sure. Thank you so much for the question. This is Jeremi. We are definitely focused on assisting our advertisers in terms of navigating this environment. It’s the most important thing that we can do as Evan mentioned, it’s definitely a change [Indecipherable] that they’re used to over the last decade or longer, and we want to make sure that we’re with them every single step of the way to ensure that they have their solutions that they need in place to measure the efficacy of their advertising is a much important priority.
So here’s what we’re doing. There are kind of three primary areas where we see the opportunities to help them. First is for the advertisers can choose to utilize SKAdNetwork we’re sharing best practices to best ensure that advertisers can remain successful as they test and learn with less information than they’re used to as Evan mentioned.
Secondly, on-boarding advertisers into our first-party privacy sage solutions such as advanced conversions, work seamlessly with our mobile measurement partners and uses aggregated privacy safe methodologies to help advertisers understand the impact of Snapchat and our media mix, and that’s also new. So that’s important to know advanced conversions and people are also going to have to take time to test and learn to better understand how it works in partnership with SKAdNetwork and so on and so forth. So we’re working with them, product engineering as well as sales, account management and the whole team holding hands of our customers to ensure that they get the best experiences.
Third, we are investing in growing our set of native experiences and that will allow advertisers to drive ROI with deeper experiences, but all within Snapchat. So one of the things that’s really important about that is that they will be able to get signals from within our app itself, which include our augmented reality experiences. Mini’s, which we’ve talked about, business profiles which are growing and we’re excited about, as well as the native commerce products that we’re building with Shopify and their advertising assets, for instance. We think this approach is reflected in our success, driving continued growth in active advertisers and again grew in Q3 both year-over-year and quarter-over-quarter to their highest level ever and so that gives us some good confidence there.
And in terms of deploying the additional solutions, this is going to be an iterative process, iOS 14 [Indecipherable] iOS 15 will be a different thing and so we’re continuing to work very closely with product and engineering to ensure that we have the right solutions in front of the right advertisers when they need them. We are ready in terms of product, of course, but we’re going to keep improving the quality of that over time. A couple of examples, we talked about advanced conversions. We’ve launched that already for both web and app advertisers and we have about 50% of our app advertisers operating in via their media measurement partner or with direct integrations. We also have a [Indecipherable] direct and integration system of our largest advertisers and that’s been really helpful as well, working with solutions engineers and other team members. And we recently enabled the advertisers, some of these ones are the most leaned into advertise across both opt-in and opt out users using privacy safe delivery and measurement to deliver efficient ads. And then, sorry, for this long long answer here, but it’s really important factors to kind of share what we’re doing with the advertisers. But additionally we started the rollout of estimated conversions, which is new and that allows advertisers to see accurate estimations of their results more quickly, but at privacy safe level the resolution that may not have been otherwise available. That product is rolling out over the course of Q4 and is new. But as for the current state of the product, one of the most important things you can do is more education and we need to help advertisers adopt it by getting high touch-support on sales, from marketing, from engineering, from product marketing, etc., and proving it works and building that trust with our advertising partners. The data that we’re seeing does give us confidence that that adoption and the adoption of advanced conversions is in a good place to be. We are confident in that solution. We believe it is the right solution, but that education it takes time. There is going to be a lot of testing and learning.
Operator
Our next question comes from Ross Sandler with Barclays. Please go ahead.
Ross Sandler — Barclays — Analyst
Great. Jeremi, just one follow-up on that last answer and then maybe one for Derek. So if we look at the average e-commerce campaign on Snapchat, how much is the role has on iOS eroded versus what you were seeing back in prior to June? And do you think these tooling solutions are going to bring us back to previous levels or do you view all this privacy stuff is kind of permanently impairing the [Indecipherable] that e-commerce company can achieve on Snap?
And then, Derek, you’ve talked in the past couple of years ago about how the fourth quarter usually has a bigger mix of brand advertising relative to other quarters and how direct response mix is down a little bit, and so I guess how much of this 30-ish percent growth that we’re guiding to in 4Q is based on that mix dynamic? And maybe a little color on what those two channels are assumed to grow, is it — are they both growing about the same in the fourth quarter? That would be helpful. Thanks a lot.
Jeremi Gorman — Chief Business Officer
Sure, I can take the first part of your question. We can’t be specific on return on ad spend, but web is less affected because of the privacy safe Snap pixel and conversion API, we’re able to really better understand and drive performance for e-commerce. And in addition to that, we have advanced conversions for the web advertisers, what we talked about in the last answer, but that’s actually been available since the spring. So we’re continuing to learn, test, iterate with our advertising partners there.
And then in terms of just [Indecipherable] in general, our first-party measurement tools and studies continue to show that our our ads are effective and they are approximately as effective as they were prior to these changes. So it’s really that the loss of signal required significant changes to our overall technology and we believe it’s actually mostly a measurement challenge, not a question of the efficacy of our advertising. And as we talked about before, it’s going to take time for advertisers to sort through what they’re seeing in their new measurement solutions, and relative to what they have available to them, including in SKAdNetwor network and with conversions studies. We are optimistic that our first party solutions including advanced conversions and estimated conversion are going to help close that measurement gap for our advertising partners and we look forward to seeing those be fully adopted. And in the meantime, we’re going to be validating with our partners, third-party, first-party, few things like conversion lift studies as well as MMM studies, etc., to calibrate across. And I will let Derek answer.
Derek Andersen — Chief Financial Officer
Hey, Ross, thanks for the question. I’ll take the part about the mix and the business heading into Q4. So the first thing I’d share is just that both the brand and DR portions of our business are impacted by the headwinds we’re seeing in Q4. Our DR [Phonetic] business which is the majority of our revenue is facing the headwinds directly from the iOS platform changes that we’ve described earlier. The supply chain and labor shortage related headwinds that we’re seeing in Q4 impact a wide variety of advertising partners across a wide variety of industries, including both brand DR oriented advertising partners.
So we would normally expect a bit of a mix shift towards brand oriented spending in the second half of Q4, and this is typically helpful to driving the overall demand and therefore pricing and the auction during this period. Heading into this quarter, I think it’s challenging to predict the exact mix or precise mix, but our guide reflects both of these two headwinds persisting throughout Q4. So hopefully that gives you a little bit more context and this helps with your question.
Operator
Our next question comes from Doug Anmuth with J.P. Morgan. Please go ahead.
Doug Anmuth — J.P. Morgan — Analyst
Thanks for taking the questions. Just wanted to follow-up on Ross’s question. Derek, just wondering if there can be any more specific in terms of the ad categories and verticals that you’re seeing most impacted by both the iOS changes and then also the supply chain and labor disruptions? And then a separate topic, just curious on Spotlight, how you’re thinking about kind of the product there and when it will be the right time to kind of move beyond some of the very early ad testing and monetize the product in a bigger way? Thanks.
Derek Andersen — Chief Financial Officer
Hey, its Derek speaking. I can take the second half of your question first and I’ll turn it over to Jeremi to talk about the advertising partners and how they’re being impacted. In terms of Spotlight, its very early for this platform. We’re excited about the early results that we’re seeing from an engagement perspective, we’re also in terms of having seen the DAU on that platform continuing to grow quarter-over-quarter and time spent per DAU. We’re also pleased to see that after the changes we’ve made to our creator fund that we have seen, the submission is doubled quarter-over-quarter. So we’re pleased. But it remains early for this platform. We’re excited about the potential for the platform to add to our ARPU opportunity over the long-term. But we’re focused still on making sure that the customer experience is great and continuing to invest in optimization and our creator community. I’ll turn it over to Jeremi to talk about the specific impacts on different customer categories.
Jeremi Gorman — Chief Business Officer
Sure, yeah, definitely. Thanks, Derek. And so just to talk about some of the verticals we’re seeing most impacted by the iOS changes and then also by the supply and inventory constraints. We’ve been meeting with a lot of advertisers and had a lot of meetings here and we’re hearing from partners across a wide variety of industries and geographies that they’re facing headwinds in their business related to disruptions in global supply chain as well as labor shortages and labor competition. So, when they’re talking about the product — putting marketing into the product where there is already low margin, for instance can erode margin and furthermore they don’t necessarily want to accelerate the sales of products that they are going to have a hard time getting into the hands of customers and that is somewhat broad — broad sweeping in terms of the supply chain issues which I’m sure we read about more broadly than just on the call here.
But one of the things I think that’s great is that there are still categories where there is an opportunity for us, those were less reliant on supply chain, things like streaming, things like entertainment. We’re seeing travel come back, which is really exciting and FinTech, etc., those types of resources are not as impacted by supply chain and we’ve done this successfully in the past when COVID hit last year, it suddenly disrupted a number of our key verticals and where that supply chain is doing so right now, and we were able to redeploy our resources across sales and product and marketing to focus on the categories with momentum and those who can win despite an extra [Indecipherable] or macroeconomic condition that may be impacting their businesses. We did that successfully before by supporting our partners who are facing challenges via doubling down on those less reliant on the macro conditions.
We expect this to impact advertiser demand in the short term in particular and many cases with the backup of the ships in Los Angeles and everything else we’ve been reading about. And we also expect that completed with the iOS platform is that what we’re seeing is that some of these clients are just going to take this additional time to test and learn as they navigate the changes to the iOS platform and the diminished need to drive incremental demand at the same time, because their supply chains aren’t able to operate at peak capacity, but we have plenty of these categories that aren’t reliant and we’re having great meeting with them. And I as said, early tests show that the performance still looks good in those categories and so we’ll navigate this as we’ve done some of the externalities in the past. The underlying fundamentals of the business haven’t changed and we’re just remaining laser-focused on working with our advertising partners to get through these challenges.
Operator
Your next question comes from Brent Thill with Jefferies. Please go ahead.
Brent Thill — Jefferies — Analyst
Thanks. Derek, is there an easy way to frame IDSA versus supply chain? Is IDSA 80%, 90% of the headwind, 10% to 20% on supply chain. Is there some easy framework how you’re thinking about? You know that the balance of those two and there was just a follow-up question as it relates to what you’re impacting from the next version of iOS 15 and that headwind you’ve baked in. Can you you just give us a sense of what that is?
Derek Andersen — Chief Financial Officer
Hey, its Derek, thanks for the question. I think — what I would say is when you look at Q3 and the impacts that we saw in Q3 relative to our expectations entering the quarter, the majority — the primary driver of the impact there is really about the impact from headwinds associated with the platform changes on iOS. Those changes accelerated as we moved through the quarter. So what you’re seeing when we go into Q4 is a full quarter impact of those issues on Q4. And the reason that we’re mentioning iOS 15 is that, that’s going to continue to disrupt the advertising ecosystem which is critical getting a stable base from the advertising ecosystem so that advertisers have some stability to then be able to adopt tools, test tools and understand the impact is really important. So that is contributing to the iOS headwinds persisting throughout Q4.
In terms of giving you specific breakdown of the mix of the impact between the supply chain and labor shortage headwinds and the iOS headwinds, I think that’s very difficult are because the two of them compound on one another in terms of their impact on the contestation and therefore the level of pricing that we would expect to see in the auction, especially in the second half of the quarter, which makes delineating between the two impacts unfortunately challenging. So hopefully that gives you a little bit of context for your question.
Brent Thill — Jefferies — Analyst
Yes, it does. Thanks, Derek.
Operator
Our next question comes from Tom Champion with Piper Sandler. Please go ahead.
Thomas Champion — Piper Sandler — Analyst
Hi, good afternoon, everyone. Maybe for Derrick. Relative to our estimates, it looks like Europe and Rest of Worlds revenue was a little more impacted by headwinds in 3Q and just curious if that’s the case or if there is anything to call out here? And then relative to content submissions on Spotlight doubling quarter-over-quarter, can you just update us on how you’re investing directly behind this? Maybe how do you create or features play into this momentum? And just any more comments on how usage trended quarter-over-quarter as well? Thank you.
Derek Andersen — Chief Financial Officer
Sure. Thanks for the question. So I think when we’re looking at the performance by region, we’re continuing to make progress on hiring and investing in our team globally across sales, marketing partnerships and sales support, as we believe this will position us well to grow our business over the longer term. In Q3, our business was healthiest in North America because we continue to benefit from the significant investments we have made in sales and sales support in the prior year. We’re in the early stages ramping the investments in our team internationally, but we are making progress, and this is a driver of our rapid headcount and opex growth that you can see in recent quarters.
That being said, it takes time for those resources to become productive. So we don’t expect an immediate impact to the top line in the near term, but that should give you a little bit of context about why North America performed relatively better in the period. I’m going to turn it over to Evan to share a little bit more about how we’re thinking about the product and our investments around engagement on Spotlight.
Evan Spiegel — Chief Executive Officer
Hey, Tom, thanks for the question. We’re certainly excited about what we’re seeing on Spotlight. I’d say the primary focus and the biggest investments we’re making in Spotlight are really in underlying infrastructure, the content understanding, content recommendation and ranking so that we can make sure that as people submit new content to Spotlight we understand what’s most compelling, who that will appeal to the most in terms of their own unique interest and then make sure that content is really distributed to that, and that’s how we can ensure creator success, not just for the most famous creator if they get a huge number of views across really big audience for creators that also want to reach a niche audience with their own unique interest. And so being able to really understand the content of the Snap allows us to help creators who are just getting started, who maybe don’t appeal to as big of an audience but still find that — find that success on our platform. So I think the infrastructure piece is critical and that’s where a lot of our focus is right now.
And as we evolved the creator program and the way that we’re rewarding folks who are submitting content, we’ve also found new ways to incentivize the diversity of content submission, which again is then making it easier for our systems to understand a wider variety of content and make sure it gets to the right people. So I’d say that’s the primary focus right now, that will also help of course drive overall time spent viewing content, which create this positive flywheel where more creators are getting more visibility and finding more success. And then of course we’re also investing in new ways for creators to monetize with Snap, the latest of course being our gifting a program, which is off to a pretty fun start where folks who find creators they really like they can they can send them and get some messages to build a relationship and and say thanks for the great content that they’re making. We also have a creator marketplace as well to make it easier for brands to partner with creators and create sponsored content. So
There is a lot going on there, but I think the fundamental thing we’re really focused on at least over the next year or two is really the content recommendation and understanding, and that’s for a key infrastructure.
Operator
[Operator Closing Remarks]
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