Categories Earnings Call Transcripts, Technology
PagerDuty, Inc. (NYSE: PD) Q1 2021 Earnings Call Transcript
PD Earnings Call - Final Transcript
PagerDuty, Inc. (PD) Q1 2021 earnings call dated June 04, 2020
Corporate Participants:
Stacey Finerman — Vice President of Investor Relations
Jennifer Tejada — Chairperson and Chief Executive Officer
Howard Wilson — Chief Financial Officer
Analysts:
Bhavan Suri — William Blair and Company — Analyst
Matt Hedberg — RBC Capital Markets — Analyst
Sterling Auty — J.P. Morgan — Analyst
Rob Oliver — Baird — Analyst
Hannah Rudoff — D.A. Davidson — Analyst
Mark Rende — Morgan Stanley — Analyst
Presentation:
Operator
Good afternoon. My name is Shontelle, and I’ll be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the PagerDuty first-quarter 2021 earnings call. [Operator instructions] After the speakers’ remarks there will be a question-and-answer session. [Operator instructions].
I will now turn the conference over to Stacey Finerman. Please go ahead.
Stacey Finerman — Vice President of Investor Relations
Good afternoon, and thank you for joining us on today’s conference call to discuss PagerDuty’s fiscal first quarter of 2021.
With me on today’s call are Jennifer Tejada, PagerDuty’s Chairperson and Chief Executive Officer; and Howard Wilson, the company’s Chief Financial Officer.
Statements made on this call include forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks and uncertainties that may cause our actual results, performance, or achievements to be materially different from those expressed or implied by the forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements represent our management’s beliefs and assumptions only as of the date such statements are made. And we undertake no obligation to update these forward-looking statements.
In addition, during today’s call, we will discuss non-GAAP financial measures. These non-GAAP financial measures are in addition to and not a substitute for or superior to measures of financial performance prepared in accordance with GAAP. There are a number of limitations related to the use of these non-GAAP measures versus their closest GAAP equivalents. For example, other companies may calculate non-GAAP financial measures differently or may use other measures to evaluate their performance, all of which could reduce the usefulness of our non-GAAP financial measures as a tool for comparison. A reconciliation between GAAP and non-GAAP financial measures is available in our earnings release. Further information on these and other factors that could affect the company’s financial results are included in the filings we make with the Securities and Exchange Commission from time to time, including the section titled Risk Factors in the company’s most recently Form 10-Q.
Now I’d like to turn the call over to our CEO, Jennifer Tejada. Jennifer?
Jennifer Tejada — Chairperson and Chief Executive Officer
Thank you, Stacey. And thank you, everyone, for joining us today. I hope that you, your families, and your colleagues are safe and healthy. We, like many of you, are in our 13th week working from home. I’m appreciative of how our team has adapted to progress our mission and of how our industry has come together, sharing ideas, solving unprecedented challenges and protecting our employees and community.
This incredible human experiment, of which we are all just a small part, has provided lessons that leave us forever changed. Lessons in courage, resilience, creativity, camaraderie and efficiency, but also lessons in loss and the cost of being underprepared, uncoordinated, and the human cost of time. For PagerDuty, the pandemic and recession have reinforced our values, which center around leadership, inclusion and equality, accountability, innovation, and the success of our customers and our people. We have always believed trust and time are society’s most valuable currencies and never has this been more true.
Our mission to elevate teams to the work that matters most is more relevant than ever as every business seeks survival, fights to protect its hard-won customers and adapts to operate more efficiently and safely in order to protect lives and jobs. When the pandemic began earlier this year, every business was compelled out of necessity to become an operations company, going digital overnight, relying on cloud-based services and driving 100% of revenue through digital e-commerce. In a matter of days, global enterprises had to find ways to meet customer expectations under unprecedented surges in web and app traffic, while supporting enterprise productivity, responsiveness, and security, all while their employees work from home. This is digital operations, a megatrend that pre-COVID was unfolding over years and is now transforming in weeks and months, even in some of the most traditional industries.
PagerDuty was built for this. When we designed a platform to automatically detect the unpredictable, coordinate disparate teams to troubleshoot difficult problems under pressure and resolve mission-critical issues in minutes, we created the digital operations management category. Over the last decade, our platform has become an essential component of critical infrastructure for many of the world’s most innovative and admired companies and increasingly, the central nervous system for the digital ecosystem. We uniquely correlate digital events for our customers from the cloud, web, apps, infrastructure, IoT, and security and translate them into action that reduces cost, protects digital revenue and ensures our customers can meet the expectations of their customers.
With digital acceleration and remote work, protecting and responding to incidents, as well as preventing them has become even more central to weathering the current environment and to long-term business success. Today, I will discuss how we have adapted to this unique environment, I’ll highlight our strong results, recap our spring platform release, I’ll review how we are progressing our priorities and I’ll talk about a few things we are doing to help our customers and community emerge from the crisis stronger.
In February, we implemented a crisis management framework with workstreams focused on employee safety, customer engagement, scenario planning, platform innovation, resiliency, and business continuity. During the first week of March, our leadership team made the decision to close all of our global offices and within 24 hours, we transitioned to an entirely remote workforce. Having already been 20% remote with the distributed engineering team, a cloud-native platform, a zero-trust security stance and a very strong culture with highly engaged employees, we made this transition relatively seamlessly. In fact, we’ve seen increased productivity in some parts of the business, where we leverage modern cloud platforms to engage customers and agile product development and DevOps methodology to innovate. While it’s too early to measure the relative impact, we pivoted all of our customer and industry events to digital, including our inaugural EMEA Summit coming up this month and our fifth Annual Summit event in September.
More generally, we’ve led with empathy and put people first, substantially increasing engagement levels with employees and customers. Don’t get me wrong. In no way has this been easy, and I’m keenly aware that every person experiences the current environment differently based on their circumstances. We expect to continue to face uncertainty, unpredictable challenges and potential headwinds, which I will discuss shortly.
That said, I’m very proud of our team, especially the way they quickly adapted to serve our customers remotely and of our corresponding results as we remain clear-eyed and pragmatic in the first fiscal quarter of 2021. Revenue for the first quarter increased 33% on a year-over-year basis to $50 million. And our focus on operating leverage continued to pay off as we dramatically improved our non-GAAP operating margin by 12 percentage points year on year. In addition to posting strong growth in what tends to be a seasonably lighter quarter, we ended the period nearly breakeven on operating cash flow, demonstrating the long-term durability of our business.
Our healthy new customer acquisition continued to show strength, validating the large and early total addressable market for digital operations management. PagerDuty is an essential cloud service for digital businesses. We ended Q1 with 13,060 customers, growing 12% year over year in a tough market. And while we experienced more churn than usual in SMB, we also had a very strong new logo acquisition results in enterprise.
Despite market dynamics, we continue to see robust year-on-year growth in new customer ARR above 55% as companies doubled down on operations, seeking easy-to-deploy solutions that accelerate digital business, while reducing costs. Trust is paramount for our customers, and our sustained investments in reliability, resilience and security at scale became increasingly relevant as threat vectors and remote users multiplied.
Our customers remained incredibly loyal, with renewal rates consistently high at over 95% and even higher for our enterprise customers. We are truly grateful for the trust that our customers place in us. And not only did we continue to deliver our services in Q1 without interruption, we also accelerated our road map and several initiatives to support COVID-specific use cases like crisis management, virtual network operations and providing free licenses for healthcare customers.
Businesses cannot afford missed opportunities or disruptions, and because of this, major incident management now has the attention of CEOs and boards. PagerDuty has become a necessity because our platform empowers users to build and maintain trust with their customers. During Q1, our customers saw incident spike anywhere from two to 11 times the incident frequency we observed pre-COVID. Yet in the face of more incidents than usual, our customers resolve them 20% faster by leveraging PagerDuty to proactively anticipate and address incidents, ensuring that they continue to serve their customers in the face of cost cuttings, remote working and growing digital demand.
There is no better example of this than Zoom Communications, where Eric Yuan and his team have scaled to support not only the deluge of businesses going remote but also the distance learning of many of our children. Zoom’s Corporate CIO, Sunil Madan, said that PagerDuty’s automation and intelligence has made their teams so efficient and effective that they’ve actually improved their time to resolve incidents despite the massive increase in people using Zoom. Winston Churchill said never waste a crisis, and we believe digital acceleration and the imperative to improve operational performance will continue well beyond this pandemic.
As companies learn from the rapid pivots they undertook this quarter, we expect digitization, cloud adoption, DevOps, security, distributed architecture, and remote working to continue to advance post-vaccine. All of these accelerating megatrends are tailwinds for us and drivers for investment in PagerDuty, especially as recovery begins. According to a recent Fortune study, 63% of Fortune 500 CEOs believe the crisis will accelerate their digital transformation. As a result, we see leaders increasing their focus on efficiency and productivity, seeking more automation across their businesses.
We advanced our automation road map in our spring release, adding new capability to our AIOps solution, announcing the general availability of Intelligent Triage, launching new integration and enhancing our dynamic service directory and business response solutions so that more teams across the company can benefit from PagerDuty. Our customers’ challenge is not a lack of data but rather how to make sense of it all in seconds and to address the root cause of an issue. PagerDuty’s advanced capabilities now recommend resolution tactics, trigger runbooks, orchestrate actions that provide diagnostics and even resolve problems without human intervention. During the quarter, we published new bidirectional integrations with IT automation partners, Pliant.io, Rundeck, and Ayehu, building on our successful AWS Eventbridge integration and strengthening our position as the central nervous system for the digital enterprise.
A timely example of resolution automation is Faithlife, a technology platform that enables face-based organizations to transform in-person gatherings into online experiences. Religious organizations have been unable to congregate for worship due to shelter-in-place orders. So the company saw a dramatic increase in usage, a thousand of their users joined online services. They began using our AIOps solution, Event Intelligence, to reduce event noise, leverage context, and direct time-sensitive work to engineering team.
After only two months, Faithlife was able to reduce the number of incidents being routed to engineering teams by over 36%, automating manual work, reducing labor costs by an estimated $114,000 per year, and preventing incidents from disrupting customers’ experience. If you can automate work, you don’t have to rely on static workflows. In Q1, we launched a new integration with Microsoft Teams that enables responders and stakeholders to resolve incidents and stay informed with PagerDuty in Teams rather than switching between services. Not only our users automatically alerted to incidents, they also received context on the incident, including whether it has happened before, how it was resolved, and who worked on it previously. User and account permissions are synced between Teams and PagerDuty, ensuring secure communication and safe information sharing.
Now all incident response activities in Teams are captured in PagerDuty post-mortem application, saving time and improving the quality of information used to help team members prevent future incidents and continuously improve. Intelligent Triage, part of our Event Intelligence product, provides visibility and coordination for teams working-related incidents, as well as providing valuable context from past to related incidents. In a distributed world where teams own and operate separate but interconnected services, Intelligent Triage ensures each team understands how their service impacts those operated by others and vice versa. It significantly reduces duplicative and counterproductive efforts between teams and according to benchmarking by IDG, cuts time to resolve from 80 minutes to as little as five.
We are confident that the macro trends I mentioned earlier present tailwinds for PagerDuty over the medium and long term. And at the same time, we balance our optimism and position of strength with the potential headwinds we see in the near term. The diversity of segments and verticals within our customer base presents us strength with less than 7% of ARR coming from the most impacted industries.
That said, we’ve seen delays in some enterprise and mid-market opportunities as large companies grapple with both the economic impact to their business models and conservative spending in light of market uncertainty. We expect these companies to accelerate their investments in digital operations when the time is right for them and are focused on building long-term partnerships. While we saw a noticeable increase in churn in our small business segment, which is about 20% of our ARR, our overall churn remained best-in-class, below 5% on an annualized basis. We may continue to see higher-than-usual churn in this segment given the economic backdrop.
Reiterating the long-term relevance and durability of our business, software and technology, advertising and marketing, e-commerce, federal and natural government, consumer products and services, healthcare, industrial and manufacturing and nonprofit segments all delivered strong growth sequentially. Software and technology was particularly strong in Q1, with the who’s who of modern B2B platforms, expanding their business with PagerDuty, including Salesforce, Shopify, Twilio, Datadog, Dropbox, Cisco, SAP, Okta, DocuSign, NetApp, Workday, Zapier and HashiCorp. We also saw encouraging signs from our customers whose need for PagerDuty dramatically increase as a result of a pandemic. One large Midwestern electronics retailer increased their PagerDuty spend as a result of pivoting to curbside pickup.
Education customers like Coursera and the University of Texas also increased their spend to prevent service interruption as online demand increased. We remain focused on the priorities we communicated on past calls, winning in enterprise, validating our position as the de-facto platform for real-time work, and expanding our reach beyond DevOps and IT.
In Q1, we continue to make progress in enterprise, while our credibility in supporting digital acceleration and distributed team orchestration for both new and core use cases led to new customer wins, including LabCorp, Carrefour, Infosys, NBCUniversal, and CHANEL. We announced our new partner program for managed service providers, kicking off with Carahsoft, Estuate, Kinect Consulting, and vCORE. This program will help enterprise at scale and accelerate their digital transformation initiatives and extend the reach of our go-to-market strategy for mid-market and enterprise.
Our international investments continue to pay off, especially in enterprise. Our EMEA team has done an excellent job in leading with PagerDuty’s value proposition to secure new customers and expansion deals. One example is a leading European retail bank with tens of thousands of employees and millions of customers. Previously, the bank relied on many legacy monitoring solutions that created a deluge of alert. We estimated that 70% of these alerts were unactionable noise. But without process and automation, significant time and money were being wasted. With PagerDuty deployed, alerts were reduced by 85%, and the meantime to respond to incidents was reduced from 30 minutes to five, resulting in significant operational efficiencies.
According to our estimates, this saved the customer $3 million annually, a 338% return on investment. Many of our customers seek to turn disruption into opportunity, and we see this in industries experiencing increased demand, such as streaming media, grocery delivery, distance learning, and healthcare. Companies in these sectors need to handle real-time issues more efficiently to ensure great customer experiences. For instance, a long-term PagerDuty customer in the food delivery space continues to expand every quarter, with this quarter being no exception.
Discovery, Inc., with a global reach in more than 220 countries has seen unprecedented demand for their brands like TLC, the Food Network, and HGTV, as well as digital services like MotorTrend on-demand and Discovery GO. They expanded their business with us in Q1, standardizing on PagerDuty across their digital product team to manage their digital operations, automating previously manual incident management, post-mortem, and operations reporting work. They now automatically route all critical unplanned work through our platform, reducing incidents by 94% and reducing the time to acknowledge an incident from 54 to five minutes, so teams can focus on new products and innovation. Personally, I was thrilled to watch Discovery broadcast the recent space launch last Saturday.
While we never could have imagined the post-COVID world, it has accelerated opportunities for us to expand our platform beyond DevOps and IT team. Some examples include crisis management, frontline healthcare worker notification, logistics, and supply chain operations management. I’m sure many of you, like me, have found exercise and wellness important during shelter-in-place. On-demand fitness is in all of our homes with few brands more pervasive than Peloton.
For years, Peloton has been using PagerDuty manage its digital services. As customer demand grew, Peloton began using PagerDuty to track shipments to their customers, ensuring a smooth delivery process and increasing overall efficiency and productivity. We continue to see long time customers apply PagerDuty to the new use cases, including customer service, where time matters. A cloud-based observability company recently expanded its use of PagerDuty to its customer support and experienced management team to manage urgent escalations for their most important customers.
Last quarter, we added 26 new integrations published by partners across a range of use cases, including dev, IT, security, and IoT, with total integrations now over 375. In the quarter, we took proactive measures to reduce our expense run rate and reallocate capital resulting from travel and event cancellation. We continue to hire and grow our workforce in a balanced way, including several new go-to-market leaders which we announced in recent weeks. Last week, we welcomed Manjula Talreja to the leadership team as our first chief customer officer.
With our strong balance sheet and low burn rate, we continue to make prudent investments in go-to-market and product innovation that we believe will deliver market share gains and robust business returns. Although current circumstances limited our ability to interact in person during the quarter, we are not limited in our ability to support those directly impacted by the pandemic. We were honored to support frontline responders, such as in the state of Virginia, where PagerDuty was used to stand up an emergency IT help desk for field-based intensive care units. We also partnered with a European government health service testing program for COVID-19, enabling effective support of all regional drive-through test sites and online registration.
We now provide 24/7 situational awareness for a complex system, supporting the national COVID-19 response by enabling teams to quickly detect and resolve issues, ensuring efficient and effective patient care. We remain committed to supporting our communities through our 1% pledge. In Q1, pagerduty.org made financial contributions to the CDC Foundation, Medecins Sans Frontieres, the UN Foundation WHO fund, and Stop the Spread, all aligned with our focus on improving time-critical global health. In addition, our employees continued to participate in community service despite lockdown.
In March, I was able to join many of my colleagues in PagerDuty’s first virtual volunteer week. Our team organized 20 volunteer opportunities with 11 global partners. A big thank you to the Dutonians who gave over 450 hours in a single week to help others. We continue to extend our lead this quarter, growing efficiently despite unprecedented conditions.
In the absence of a widely available vaccine, the market remains volatile and uncertain. What we are certain about is our unwavering commitment to our customers’ success, the long-term durability of our business underpinned by a large and growing market opportunity, our central position in the digital ecosystem, our easy-to-deploy platform, our low-friction land-and-expand business model and our strong balance sheet. Most of all, PagerDuty is differentiated by our culture and people who have shown incredible resilience, grit, ingenuity, and compassion through every turn in our journey. We are prepared to weather whatever comes and to seize our advantage and emerge strong.
Finally, I feel it’s important to mention that all of us at PagerDuty stand with the Black community against racism, violence, and hate now and into the future. We will continue to advocate for change through financial support like our recent contributions to Black Lives Matter and the NAACP through setting an example in inclusive leadership and by demanding equality in the tech industry and social justice in our communities. With that, I’d now like to turn the call over to our CFO, Howard, who will walk through the financial results. Howard?
Howard Wilson — Chief Financial Officer
Thank you, Jennifer. We are pleased with our first-quarter fiscal 2021 results. Revenue for the first quarter increased 33% year over year to approximately $50 million, beating the high end of our guidance. We had another good quarter for international, with revenue growing 47% year over year.
New customer acquisition was strong, increasing 12% on a year-over-year basis to 13,060. For us, this demonstrates the trust customers have in our platform to manage their services, support their business, deal with a spike in incidents, or pivot to more of their business online. Our non-GAAP gross margin for the quarter was 87%, above our target range and remains industry-leading. We saw significant improvement in our non-GAAP operating loss margin to just under 9%, down from 21% in the first fiscal quarter of 2020.
Our non-GAAP EPS came in at negative $0.04 per share, well ahead of our guidance as we managed expenses prudently in the light of the COVID-19 pandemic. After delivering three consecutive quarters of positive operating cash flow, our Q1 operating cash flow was near breakeven at approximately negative $200,000. Despite the macro backdrop, we continue to see growth with our largest customers, with new customer adds in enterprise accelerating over the last three quarters. We added 25 more customers with ARR above $100,000 compared to Q4 FY ’20, taking us to 348 customers, a growth rate of 44% year over year.
Customers with over $500,000 in ARR increased by 46% year over year to 57% in the quarter. Our dollar-based net retention rate for the quarter was 121%, in line with the range we provided in our Q1 earnings call of 120% to 123%. This healthy net retention rate represents our customers’ commitment to us, our high renewal rates, and low churn. In future quarters, we are likely to report on net retention rate as falling within a range.
Reflecting the current economic environment, late in the quarter, we saw some large customers paused expansion discussions as they attended to the realities of an overnight remote workforce and the sudden business impact of stay-at-home orders. Although in the short term, we may see some downgrades from budget cuts and layoffs, we believe that PagerDuty represents a strong partner in this environment as we can support customers’ goals through automation, labor cost reduction, and support for distributed teams. As we mentioned last quarter, the diversity of our customer base is a strength. Some industries such as software and technology, media and entertainment, and healthcare are showing good momentum.
However, we have seen some impact indirectly affected industries such as travel and hospitality, transportation and logistics, and energy and utilities. Combined, these make up approximately 7% of our ARR. In addition, we have seen SMB companies, which represent approximately 20% of our ARR, coming under increasing pressure with an increase in churn. Despite this, we are pleased that our churn ARR, representing customers who have left us, remains below 5% on an annualized basis.
I will now turn to the detailed financial results. These results are on a non-GAAP basis. Our GAAP financial results, along with a reconciliation between GAAP and non-GAAP results, can be found in our earnings release. In the first quarter, non-GAAP gross margin was 87%.
Our best-in-class gross margins are made possible by our cloud-native architecture, DevOps approach to production, and programmatic approach to customer success. Our goal is to deliver gross margins between 84% and 86%, and you should anticipate us to land in this range in future quarters. We also expect that over the long term, as we scale, we will reap the benefits of our operating leverage. In the first quarter, non-GAAP operating expenses were $47 million compared to $40 million in the first quarter of fiscal 2020, a 19% increase, which was significantly lower than our revenue growth of 33%.
Non-GAAP research and development expenses for Q1 were $13 million compared to $10 million in the same year-ago period, representing an increase of 28% year over year. We will continue to invest in product innovation to bolster our capabilities, particularly in automation and AIOps. Non-GAAP sales and marketing expenses for Q1 were $24 million and grew by 24% compared to Q1 of fiscal 2020 of $20 million. This equates sales and marketing as a percentage of revenue improving to 49% of revenue, down from 53% of revenue.
Given the evolving market dynamics, we have obviously moved toward more digital marketing, and we’ll continue to monitor the best areas for spending in order to drive ROI. Non-GAAP general and administrative expenses for Q1 were $10 million for the quarter, remaining flat year over year, reducing expense as a percentage of revenue to 20% as we continue to scale and improve overall operating margin. Our non-GAAP operating loss in the quarter was $4 million compared to a loss of $8 million in the same quarter last year. Our non-GAAP operating margin was negative 9% in Q1, a significant improvement from the negative 21% we saw in the same period of last year as we continue to scale our operation.
Non-GAAP net loss for the first quarter was $3 million or a net loss of $0.04 per share compared to a non-GAAP net loss of $7 million or a net loss of $0.22 per share in the first quarter of last year. We reported negative $185,000 in operating cash flow in the first quarter compared to negative $8 million in the prior year. We are pleased with our ability to manage costs in such turbulent times. Free cash flow was negative $3 million in Q1, an improvement compared to the negative $9 million free cash flow loss we reported in Q1 of fiscal 2020, largely driven by the year-over-year improvement in operating cash flow, offset by incremental capex to complete the build-out of our Atlanta office.
Free cash flow margin was negative 6% compared to negative 23% in the same quarter last year. Turning to the balance sheet. We ended the quarter with $351 million in cash, cash equivalents, and investments, essentially flat compared to the end of fiscal-year 2020. Now before I discuss guidance, I’d like to comment on what we are seeing in our customer and prospect base.
Over the past quarter, we have seen some new patterns emerge. From an industry perspective, we have seen some verticals continue to expand, even accelerating and others contract. However, we have seen more pronounced general trends in terms of company size. For example, we’ve seen strong customer acquisition in the enterprise, but a noticeable slowing in expansion in some of our customers.
Whereas in SMB, we have seen good customer acquisition and expansion at higher churn. While we still see strong demand for our platform and strong retention rates, at the same time, we are also seeing some headwinds in this evolving macro environment. And as such, we continue to take a balanced approach to our quarterly and annual guidance. We are broadening the range of full-year guidance for revenue, lowering the bottom end of the range, and maintaining the top end of the range we provided in our Q4 earnings call.
For the second quarter of fiscal 2021, we expect revenue in the range of $50 million to $51 million, which at the midpoint would represent a 25% growth rate from the second fiscal quarter of 2020. Non-GAAP net loss per share is expected to be in the range of $0.06 to $0.07 for the second fiscal quarter, with basic shares outstanding from Q2 expected to be 39 million. This implies an operating loss margin of 10% to 12%. For the full year of fiscal 2021, we expect revenue in the range of $204 million to $213 million, which, at the midpoint, represents a 25% growth rate for the full-year 2021.
Non-GAAP net loss per share is expected to be in the range of $0.25 to $0.30, and this implies an operating loss margin of 10% to 12%. Basic shares outstanding are expected to be 79 million. We are very well placed for continued growth. We have a loyal customer base, the subscription-based business model, and our digital operations management offerings are even more relevant as companies place increasing reliance on their digital assets.
We have a strong balance sheet and will invest both in our platform and our go-to-market capabilities with a view to extending our leadership. With that, I will open up the call for Q&A.
Questions and Answers:
Operator
[Operator instructions] Our first question comes from Bhavan Suri with William Blair & Co. Your line is open.
Bhavan Suri — William Blair and Company — Analyst
Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my question. And it’s good to see sort of the net dollar retention rate stabilized and the upside in the quarter. I just wanted to touch a little bit around the sales enablement and productivity.
You’ve been rolling out a bunch of sales enablement initiatives to address execution, the pressure of the expansion activity. It sounds like from the comments you just said, you’re making some progress there. Just a little more about what is the nature of those initiatives and sort of were there any incremental changes in the quarter that Dave Justice and others made and then what level of success are you seeing because it’s been a couple of quarters now in terms of productivity picking up. Hello?
Howard Wilson — Chief Financial Officer
Hi. Jen, you may be muted.
Jennifer Tejada — Chairperson and Chief Executive Officer
Hi, Bhavan. Hi, Bhavan. Could you hear me okay?
Bhavan Suri — William Blair and Company — Analyst
Hi. Did you guys hear that? Hi.
Jennifer Tejada — Chairperson and Chief Executive Officer
We did.
Bhavan Suri — William Blair and Company — Analyst
I can. I thought for a second I dropped you or…
Jennifer Tejada — Chairperson and Chief Executive Officer
No, no, no. Thank you so much for your question.
Bhavan Suri — William Blair and Company — Analyst
Did you get the question?
Jennifer Tejada — Chairperson and Chief Executive Officer
Yes, I did.
Bhavan Suri — William Blair and Company — Analyst
Of course. Yeah.
Jennifer Tejada — Chairperson and Chief Executive Officer
So Dave has been here. Dave Justice is our new Chief Revenue Officer. Although I suspect he feels the honeymoon is well and truly over. He’s been here for almost five months, and he’s brought a tremendous amount of rigor and process to our sales organization, which has been great to see.
One of the biggest contributions, I think what he’s made to date has been in deepening our leadership bench. So we have brought in a new head of sales operations, a new head of North America. Most recently, we announced Manjula Talreja, who will be leading customer success and professional services. And I think all those things bode well to continuing to improve sales productivity.
New ARR was very strong in the quarter, which I’m thrilled about that demonstrates the demand in the market. And our focus on hiring the right profile and ramping them more effectively is definitely starting to pay off. Having said that, with the macro conditions, sometimes, it’s hard to see causality. So we look at pipeline, and pipeline is very strong.
We’re also having a lot of conversations with customers. So I’ve seen 15 customers in the last two weeks, for instance. And it’s nice to see the engagement with customers continue despite the economic backdrop. Finally, I would say that we’ve spent quite a bit of investment in enabling our sales force to focus on value, really demonstrating quantifiable business value, which is extremely timely, I guess, in this environment where we have customers that are really looking for cost efficiency, improvements in productivity, and this is something that PagerDuty delivers in a highly qualifiable way. So that’s also led to some improvement.
Bhavan Suri — William Blair and Company — Analyst
No, that’s great. And I’m going to add one more to that. You talked about the enablement, the value prop partner program. So a few weeks back, you just announced the expanded partner program for SIs, consultants, and SPEs, some new partners you added.
Just an update in ecosystem strategy. And then maybe — I know it’s early, but the early interest you’re seeing from the guys you’ve just added and prospective partners around deploying sort of this type of solution more broadly within enterprises.
Jennifer Tejada — Chairperson and Chief Executive Officer
Well, thank you. I really appreciate you picking up on that because partnerships and expanding our ecosystem has been an area of focus this year, but it’s still quite early for us. We’ve largely been an independent distribution business for most of our lifetime as a company. What I would say is all of these partners see a tremendous opportunity to support customers as they’ve accelerated their digital transformation.
So I mentioned in my prepared comments that many of our customers are pulling forward strategic projects that historically they would have planned to unfold over years now into months and weeks. And there’s a lot of change management and transformation that comes with that. So I think our partners see an opportunity to be part of the journey with PagerDuty, particularly as digital operations management, DevOps, transformation, and cloud adoption all become accelerated macro trends within these customers. And we continue to invest in partnerships with the cloud service providers as well.
So I’m really encouraged with both the level of interest, but also the opportunity, which is very early for us at this point.
Bhavan Suri — William Blair and Company — Analyst
Awesome. Thank you, guys. Appreciate you taking my questions. Thank you.
Operator
Your next question comes from Matt Hedberg with RBC Capital Markets. Your line is open.
Matt Hedberg — RBC Capital Markets — Analyst
Great. Thanks for taking my questions and glad you guys are all doing well. Jen, given you guys are — it’s a mission-critical piece of software and platform that you guys provide, especially in light of COVID, I guess I’m wondering — twofold. Can you talk a little bit more about some color on the delays you saw in expansion? But then also, can you comment on your pipeline growth and maybe some demand trends through May given what sounds like strong customers’ interest due to COVID?
Jennifer Tejada — Chairperson and Chief Executive Officer
Sure. And it’s a mixed bag when you look across segments. I mean, enterprise has continued to be a strong segment for us and new, where I frequently mentioned that we don’t see a lot of competition on the land or customer acquisition motion. We’re often replacing a greenfield environment.
And so we definitely saw that demand signal where new customers are saying, oh, shoot, I really need an incident management environment, I need to do a better job of managing my digital operations. And this is because a lot of prospects and customers were literally moving to 100% e-commerce environment overnight out of necessity just given COVID and the economic backdrop. And what we also saw in that was some enterprise customers who had their hands full dealing with their digital transition or their transition to working from home or the requirements and look at how all of their physical environments, like manufacturing environments, etc., needed to be managed. So you just saw a lot of people really struggling staff, all of the sort of time-critical issues that they had as a result of COVID sort of unfolding the way it did.
And some of those customers said, hey, I need some more time to get this done. We had a couple of deals slip because we couldn’t get availability from their legal team to even finalize documents because they were working on organizational restructuring, for instance. But we didn’t see deals go away. We just saw deals delay, and I think that’s important.
And I think as customers get back into a groove where they can focus on strategic initiatives, etc., we still see that business being there. And long term, see all of these tailwinds working in our favor, whether we’re talking about accelerated cloud adoption, the digital acceleration I mentioned, the need to manage security in a hybrid environment. And the shift to e-commerce, I think many of our customers who shifted to 100% e-commerce are not going to shift back to the brick-and-mortar balance that they had before. So all of those things bode well for us long term.
And from a pipeline perspective, we see transactions, like the number of transactions and volume looking good. But it remains to be seen how long it’s going to take us to close out and drive those transactions into business.
Matt Hedberg — RBC Capital Markets — Analyst
That makes a lot of sense. I mean, it just seems like your relevancy is even more important today, and maybe there’s some pauses now, but that certainly could accelerate post-COVID. I guess, Howard, I know billings isn’t a perfect measure for you guys for lots of reasons. But you calculated billings, it looks like you grew sort of mid-30s. That was even above where your revenue grew. Can you talk about what drove sort of strong growth in deferred revenue?
Howard Wilson — Chief Financial Officer
Yes. So Matt, as I’ve mentioned when we’ve chatted previously, our billings, of course, we’re pleased when we see a number like this with around 35% growth. And even when we look at it on a trading 12-month basis, it also sits around the 35% mark. So that’s a good place for us to be.
I think for us, though, it’s always — there’s a cyclical nature to our billings, given both the timing of renewals and also the fact that we have this model where customers typically co-term when they expand. So we have this constant realignment that happens. But we have seen some good positive trends. We’ve seen some customers who’ve been month-to-month customers make the transition to being annual customers. So again, not a huge swath of those, but those kinds of things are always positive.
Matt Hedberg — RBC Capital Markets — Analyst
Super helpful. Thanks, guys.
Jennifer Tejada — Chairperson and Chief Executive Officer
Thanks, Matt.
Howard Wilson — Chief Financial Officer
Thanks, Matt.
Operator
Our next question comes from Sterling Auty with JP Morgan. Your line is open.
Sterling Auty — J.P. Morgan — Analyst
Hi, guys. So just wondering, what did you experience in terms of initial deal size in the quarter especially once the pandemic was hitting?
Jennifer Tejada — Chairperson and Chief Executive Officer
In terms of deal size, I think we saw people move quickly on smaller transactions and take more time to look at larger transactions. What I have seen, particularly in the last several weeks, is a continued interest in strategic deals. But a real focus on wanting to make sure the value proposition can be quantified. And a shift in a lot of the conversation from we need the technology, we need the DevOps methodology to I want to improve my labor costs, I want to improve my cost efficiency, I need to increase my productivity.
All of my network operations center workers just went home, and they’re distributed. I need you to help me with that. So there is a little bit of, I think, a shift in focus in that regard. And like I said, when you look across our customer base, across the different industry verticals and the different segments, they’re all experiencing this pandemic and the recession associated with it in different ways.
So our small business that’s been hit the hardest are a lot of our enterprise customers. Some of those verticals are doing very well and in fact, accelerating their initiatives. So you really have to kind of treat every customer differently.
Sterling Auty — J.P. Morgan — Analyst
Okay. And then I was intrigued by — you made, I think, two remarks in your prepared remarks about critical events. It sounds like maybe you’re expanding the use case of the platform. Are you looking to get into more of the segment that we would traditionally see Everbridge competing in?
Jennifer Tejada — Chairperson and Chief Executive Officer
That’s a great question. And I just want to make sure you can hear me OK, Sterling, because you were breaking up a little bit. Am I clear?
Sterling Auty — J.P. Morgan — Analyst
It’s a little choppy but not bad.
Jennifer Tejada — Chairperson and Chief Executive Officer
Okay. Well, what we are seeing is a number of our customers who are already using us for business response, meaning the escalation of an issue from the technology team to business leadership or communications, marketing, legal risk management, use us for crisis management. So really orchestrating their leadership to make sure employees were healthy and well, etc. We haven’t explicitly gone after the mass notification market, but we have seen customers pull us as a result of COVID, and it kind of just depends on the circumstance.
PagerDuty is already there in your engineering organization, in your IT organization, and it’s trusted. And so it’s kind of a natural adjacency to then leverage it for other times across the business.
Sterling Auty — J.P. Morgan — Analyst
Got it. Thank you.
Operator
Our next question comes from Rob Oliver with Baird. Your line is open.
Rob Oliver — Baird — Analyst
Hey. Great. Thank you, guys, very much for taking my question. Jen, Churchill also said, “Give us the tools and we’ll get the job done.” So it sounds like you guys are falling into that category. Sorry, history buff. Couldn’t resist.
Jennifer Tejada — Chairperson and Chief Executive Officer
I love that guy. I almost put that quote in there, too.
Rob Oliver — Baird — Analyst
Yes. I guess we’re all craving that. So I wanted to double that a little bit on some of my other colleagues and researcher have been asking about, which is on some of the nature, some of the new wins this quarter. You mentioned a large retailer going curbside.
I think I’m — probably bought a couple of chromebooks for my kids at that retailer. So I just want to get a sense for how much of the lands or expansions this quarter were so-called crisis buys. Or were these things that were already in the pipeline, just trying to separate out kind of — because clearly, there’s kind of two sides to the COVID coin, and there’s those that reacted quickly to do some things. So just trying to maybe tease that out a little bit.
Jennifer Tejada — Chairperson and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah. I mean, I think a couple of thoughts. One, you saw some verticals perform really well in the quarter, verticals like software, technology, retail, with particular e-commerce plays. I was on the phone today with a customer who is a large retailer that have over 2,000 stores.
And they have been seen as an essential service during this time period, and they’re undertaking quite a bit of strategic initiative around their digital business, and they’ve continued to grow with us. And that’s an example of a customer that has really continued to invest in digitization and serving their operations really effectively because, at the end of the day, these customer relationships are so hard-fought. They’ve got to make sure they deliver when they have that opportunity, whether it’s curbside or online or the example of Peloton using us to support logistics to ensure customer happiness with the entire life cycle. And so most of our deals are created and closed in the quarter with the exception of our large enterprise deals.
So I would say that a lot of them were COVID relevant, but all COVID does is it makes the need to be able to identify an issue, respond quickly, manage your digital operations effectively, more relevant, more important. And we saw a lot of customers accelerate their cloud adoption. We saw many customers leverage us because they had to build apps overnight to move to 100% e-commerce environment. And PagerDuty is the essential critical part of infrastructure to support those digital services.
And I said this in my prepared comments, but I’m not sure if everybody gets it. As all these companies become digital, they’re running services and they become operations companies, and that’s what we do for a living. So I think it just really underscores the opportunity in the TAM and the relevance that we serve and the potential long term for these tailwinds to be very strong for us as customers get more comfortable making larger investments again.
Rob Oliver — Baird — Analyst
Great. That’s really helpful. And I just had one quick follow-up for Howard. Just on the SMB churn side, any color around that in terms of — it’s obvious that there are going to be some SMBs that are going to be pressured and they’re going to have to rationalize usage across the board.
Any feedback? I’m sure you guys are aggressively asking those customers why they churned. And you guys are not the cheapest solution in the market. Maybe it’s okay that those customers leave, but just to get a sense for whether those were competitive, whether it was macro-related. Or any color there would be helpful. Thank you, guys, very much.
Howard Wilson — Chief Financial Officer
Yeah, sure. Thanks, Rob. From the analysis that we’ve had to date, it seems as though a large percentage of this has been macro-related. I think the pressure that’s being felt among the SMB companies.
And for us, we look at SMB as companies with revenue under $50 million. They’ve been under a lot of stress through this crisis. And it’s not surprising that they would be looking to either cut costs in some way or look for some sort of savings, and so we haven’t been too surprised by that. But while we mentioned that, it hasn’t been an overwhelming amount.
So if I were to give you some indication, the churn that we’ve had out of SMB remains below 10% on an annualized basis.
Rob Oliver — Baird — Analyst
Thanks a lot, Howard.
Operator
Your next question comes from Rishi Jaluria with D.A. Davidson. Your line is open.
Hannah Rudoff — D.A. Davidson — Analyst
Hi, guys. This is Hannah on for Rishi today. Thank you for taking my question. So in terms of customer concentration, can you talk about the dynamics you’re seeing there? I’m just curious about the balance between inbound customer requests wanting to deploy PagerDuty versus outbound direct sales versus your self-serve motion.
Jennifer Tejada — Chairperson and Chief Executive Officer
Well, I’ll start with that, Hannah, and Howard, you can jump in as you’d like to. And Hannah, it’s nice to have you on the call today. The vast majority of our lands come through our digital e-commerce environment. These tend to be very well-qualified buyers.
They are developers. They’re people responsible for applications, services, or infrastructure that want to make sure they’ve the eyes and ears and can very quickly detect and get in front of issues before they become business-impacting incidents. Our customers are able to grow in a frictionless way with us. And one of the customers I was actually speaking with today was talking about how they love it when a solution grows organically inside the business because the product is so utilitarian and users love it and adopt it, and then they can take a more strategic approach and grow it over time.
And that’s how a lot of our customers land and expand. They land through digital e-commerce. They then grow organically to a point which a salesperson will get involved and start to look for strategic initiatives like cloud migration or new application development, new product launches, DevOps transformation, etc., where you start to see more standardization on the product. So it really is a mix, but we continue to see a lot of visits come to PagerDuty through word of mouth, through the reputation of our business because we’ve built trust over many, many years, such that a lot of our users are with us in their fourth or fifth company where they’ve brought PagerDuty into that organization.
Hannah Rudoff — D.A. Davidson — Analyst
Great. That’s really helpful. And then what kind of assumptions around the recovery do you have built in the guidance? And what kind of churn assumptions from the SMB segment are you building in? Do you see it stabilizing or maybe increasing a little going forward?
Howard Wilson — Chief Financial Officer
Yeah. So, Hannah, I’ll take that. In terms of — when we look at our guidance for the full year, we don’t have the crystal ball that we would very much like to have in terms of being able to be very specific and determine to stick around the impacts from the different areas. What we have done though is we have looked at the affected industries and as I mentioned in my prepared remarks, we have exposure of about 7% of ARR related to directly impacted industries.
And when we look at SMB, as I mentioned, SMB is about 20% of our annual recurring revenue, and we’ve seen increased levels of churn there but nothing terribly dramatic. And in fact, for SMB, the other thing we’ve seen is being increased rates of acquisition and expansion in SMB. So there’s almost a tale of two cities within SMB right now. So we’ve tried to take into account both the macro to the extent that we can understand it.
And as you would expect, this is changing almost day to day. And we’ve tried to be balanced and prudent in terms of coming up with a view for the full year and for this next quarter. That incorporates those different aspects. But we’re feeling confident about our guidance for the full year based on what we can see today.
Hannah Rudoff — D.A. Davidson — Analyst
Great. Thank you both.
Howard Wilson — Chief Financial Officer
Thanks, Hannah.
Jennifer Tejada — Chairperson and Chief Executive Officer
Thanks, Hannah.
Operator
Our next question comes from Sanjit Singh. Your line is open.
Mark Rende — Morgan Stanley — Analyst
Hi. This is Mark Rende on for Sanjit. Thanks for taking my question. I guess to quickly kind of follow up on that last question about the assumptions embedded in the guidance, maybe quickly, is there any kind of way we should be thinking about net expansion in the next quarter? Any kind of bookends to put on that? Should we think about it kind of decreasing again? All I know there’s still some of this kind of overhang from the competitor churn, so anything to kind of put a bookend on that would be helpful.
Howard Wilson — Chief Financial Officer
Yeah. Thanks, Mark. As we mentioned last quarter, we provided a range for net retention in terms of that being between — we expected it to land within a range of 120% to 123%, and we came in at 121%. But when we look at this current environment, we feel it’s very difficult to guide to a specific number right now.
So what was good for us in this last quarter, I can’t tell you what happened in Q1 was that we did see expansion in SMB. We did see some difference in behaviors like one enterprise company, large software company, where we had anticipated or planned a large expansion because of COVID-19, they ended up taking a position where they just renewed their multimillion-dollar agreement with us, and they’ve deferred doing that expansion once we through — some of this crisis. So we’re, at this stage, not providing guidance but pleased with the high renewal rates we continue to see and the positive aspects of expansion that we’re seeing in segments like SMB.
Jennifer Tejada — Chairperson and Chief Executive Officer
Sure. And I’d add to that. One thing that I think gives us a lot of confidence around the durability of our growth is how well the PagerDuty platform has performed while being tested under unprecedented demand. Many of our customers have seen a surge in traffic.
We talked about the Zoom example, where they were seeing 11 times the number of incidents and the product is performing very well. So when I am talking to customers, what I’m hearing is a lot of appreciation, a lot of confidence, a desire to want to do more when the time is right for those customers. And that gives me a real sense of confidence around the durability of our growth long term. And the fact that as we play the long game, I think these tailwinds of companies becoming more digital, moving toward e-commerce, accelerating their cloud, accelerating their digital transformation, that all bodes very well for us over the long term.
Mark Rende — Morgan Stanley — Analyst
Perfect. And then maybe just a quick follow-up. Really strong $100,000-plus ARR customer growth in the quarter, obviously. And apologies if you kind of hit on this already, but was that primarily driven by, like, adoption of the new products like Event Intelligence, Visibility, the whole suite? Or is that more from the suite expansion side in this quarter? Or maybe even just like net new large enterprises realizing the importance of Digital Operations Management, particularly in today’s world?
Jennifer Tejada — Chairperson and Chief Executive Officer
It’s both, to be frank. We had a very strong new logo acquisition quarter for enterprise, which we’re really pleased to see because that creates a lot of expansion opportunity for us in the future. We also saw very strong adoption, our customers starting to really leverage Event Intelligence, where it’s reducing the amount of noise and number of alerts coming into teams that historically have been inactionable and wasted a lot of money. So that creates a huge labor cost savings and productivity uplift.
And then we also saw some really great suite expansions, like a large insurance company in the Midwest. They’ve been a customer with us since 2016. They added 400 users in the past quarter just across a number of teams where they’re already in multiple development teams and wanted to improve their application support given their move to being more e-commerce oriented in this environment. So we’re seeing kind of strength all around.
What you didn’t mention in that question was new use cases. And we’ve seen some really interesting new use cases, including where we’re working with a government health organization in Europe to help them with their COVID testing, as well as customer service use cases with the observability customer that I mentioned. So the multiple engines for growth that we have talked about in the past continue to give us a lot of opportunity to both expand our user base on the core product, which, as I said, has become really essential critical infrastructure for our customers. But then also expand our surface area with new product and new use cases within the customer.
And then finally, we saw good strength with our European team again this year. They’ve continued to really deliver strong performance for us.
Mark Rende — Morgan Stanley — Analyst
Awesome. Thank you.
Jennifer Tejada — Chairperson and Chief Executive Officer
Thank you.
Howard Wilson — Chief Financial Officer
Thanks, Mark.
Operator
And there are no final questions at this time. I will now turn the conference back over to Ms. Finerman for closing remarks.
Stacey Finerman — Vice President of Investor Relations
Thank you, everybody, for taking the time to join our call today. Have a great night.
Operator
[Operator Closing Remarks]
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