Datadog, Inc. (NASDAQ: DDOG) Q3 2020 earnings call dated Nov. 10, 2020
Corporate Participants:
AJ Ljubich — Director of Investor Relations
Olivier Pomel — Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder
David Obstler — Chief Financial Officer
Analysts:
Sanjit Singh — Morgan Stanley — Analyst
Sterling Auty — JPMorgan — Analyst
Chris Merwin — Goldman Sachs — Analyst
Brad Zelnick — Credit Suisse — Analyst
Raimo Lenschow — Barclays — Analyst
Matt Hedberg — RBC Capital Markets — Analyst
Brent Thill — Jefferies — Analyst
Robert Majek — Raymond James — Analyst
Brad Reback — Stifel — Analyst
Jack Andrews — Needham — Analyst
Ittai Kidron — Oppenheimer — Analyst
Bhavan Suri — William Blair — Analyst
Andrew Nowinski — D.A. Davidson — Analyst
Presentation:
Operator
Ladies and gentleman, thank you for standing by and welcome to the Datadog Third Quarter 2020 Earnings Call. [Operator Instructions]
I’d now like to hand the conference over to your host today, Mr. AJ Ljubich, Director of Investor Relations. Please go ahead, sir.
AJ Ljubich — Director of Investor Relations
Thank you, guys. Good afternoon and thank you for joining us today to review Datadog’s third quarter 2020 financial results, which we announced in our press release issued after the close of market today. Joining me on the call today are Olivier Pomel, Datadog’s Co-Founder and CEO; and David Obstler, Datadog’s CFO.
During this call, we will make statements related to our business that are forward-looking under federal securities laws and made pursuant to the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, including statements related to our future financial performance, including our outlook for the fourth quarter and for the full year of 2020; our strategy; the potential benefits for our products, partnerships, and investments, anticipated hiring; our ability to capitalize on our market opportunity; and the impact that COVID-19 pandemic from our customers using our platform and the industry trends as well as our ability to benefit from these trends.
The words anticipate, believe, continue, estimate, expect, intend, will and similar expressions are intended to identify forward-looking statements or similar indications of future expectations. These statements reflect our views only as of today and not as of any subsequent date. These statements are subject to a variety of risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from expectations. For a discussion of material risks and other important factors that could cause actual results to differ, please refer to the quarterly report on Form 10-Q for the quarterly period ended June 30, 2020 filed with the SEC on August 10, 2020.
Additional information will be made available on our Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarterly period ended September 30 2020 and other filings and reports that we may file from time-to-time with the SEC. Our filings with the SEC are available on the Investor Relations section of our website. A replay of this call will be available there for a limited time. Non-GAAP financial measures will be discussed on this conference call. Please refer to the tables in our recent earnings release, which you can find on the Investor Relations portion of our website for reconciliation of these measures to the most directly comparable GAAP financial measure.
With that let’s turn the call over to Olivier.
Olivier Pomel — Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder
Thank you, AJ and thank you all for joining us today. We are very pleased with our performance in Q3. We showed continued high growth at scale and demonstrated efficiencies. It was an exciting quarter in which we maintain a high velocity of product delivery, starting with the new products and features announced at Dash, our annual user conference. We are building on our strong track record of innovation and expanding our lead at the most complete and cloud native end-to-end observability platform.
With the majority of our employees continuing to work from home, I am extremely impressed by our productivity. Our engineers continue to build and ship innovative solutions or go-to-market teams continue to efficiently deliver value to our customers and we continue to hire rapidly across R&D and sales and marketing to best position ourselves for the future. We are strategic partners to our customers like never before, as the importance of being digital first and agile is more pronounced than ever. The companies everywhere are continuing to migrate to the cloud, investing their digital operations to achieve these outcomes. And as our market opportunity driven by multiple platforming and cloud migration has become clearer during this time, so it has our ability to execute against it.
Now, on to a review of Q3 results. To summarize Q3 at a high level, revenue was $155 million, an increase of 61% year-over-year and above the high end of our guidance range. We ended the quarter with 1,107 customers with ARR of $100,000 or more, up from 727 last year. These customers generate about 75% of our ARR. We have about 13,100 customers, up from about 9,500 last year, which means we’re adding about 1,000 customers in the quarter. Meaningfully more in the 600 than in Q2. We also continue to be capital efficient, is free cash flow of $29 million. And as in past quarters, our dollar based net retention rate was of a 130%, as customers increased their usage and adopted our newer product.
Now to review Q3 in more detail. Throughout the quarter, usage growth of existing customers was robust, which was a return to more normalized levels after slower usage expansion in Q2. To be more specific, the pace of usage growth in Q3 was broadly in line with pre-COVID historical levels. As a result, we feel comfortable that some of the rationalized cloud usage from our larger customer that we’ve seen in Q2 was transitory, as many of those customers have now returned to steady growth from multiple consecutive months. Strength was also broad based across customers of different sizes and within different industries. In addition to that, new logo generation continue to be robust with customers additions in line with pre-COVID levels and churn remained consistent with historical rates. Taking all of this into account, total ARR at end of the quarter was a new record for the Company, making this a very successful quarter.
Next our platform strategy continues to resonate and win in the market. As of the end of Q3, 71% of customers are using two or more products, which is up from 50% last year. Approximately 20% of customers are using four or more products, which is up from only 7% a year ago. We had another quarter in which approximately 75% of new logos landed with two or more products and we continue to be pleased with the uptake of our newest products, including Synthetics, RUM, NPM and Security. I will point out that Synthetics has now be commercially available for about a year and today it is used by thousands of customers, has reached eight figures of ARR and continues to be in hyper growth. Adoption of Synthetics has exceeded our expectations, which will attribute to the combination of the strength of the product itself and the product [Phonetic] platform. As a reminder, friction less adoption is a key value proposition of our platform, which we expect will benefit all of our products.
To conclude my review of the quarter, our ability to both land and expand during which have been a time of uncertainty, demonstrates Datadog’s importance as companies of all sizes and across all industries, even in the most challenged sectors are turning to start these operations as the most strategically important segment of their business.
Now onto R&D. We have a proven and long track record of innovation, and our team lived up to that standard in Q3, with the introduction of eight new products and major features of Dash. With announcement include the introduction of the Datadog marketplace to enable technology partners to build applications on top of our platform. The general availability of continuous provider to measure core level performance through an always on and low overhead solution. Expanding Synthetics to continuous integration and deployment pipelines, which ended that in earlier in the development process. The introduction of Mobile Real User Monitoring for both Android and iOS. The general availability of error tracking to aggregate triage and prioritize frontend application errors. The beta launch of internet management for DevOps and security teams. The beta launch of compliance monitoring, which extends our security solutions to proactively notify on misconfigurations and compliance drift. And lastly the beta launch of recommended monitors, a suite of pre-configured curated and customizable alerts.
Additionally, we recently announced a strategic partnership with Microsoft currently in public preview, which will make Datadog available to purchase, implement and use directly from the Azure console and Azure and Datadog sales teams will increase collaboration for cross-selling to enterprise clients.
Today we also announced an expansion of our strategic partnership with Google Cloud platform, which extends or GCP presence into new regions and enhance our go-to-market collaboration and sales alignment between Datadog and GCP. We believe this partnership, along with our existing alliance with AWS demonstrate our leadership in cloud environments, as well as the collaborative nature of our relationships with the public tenders. These are just a few of the new features and enhancements we see this quarter. Rather than listing them all, I’ll conclude on R&D [Phonetic] with two main takeaways.
First, I am very proud of the continued productivity of our teams. Together we have not allowed the pandemic and work from home to destroy our roadmap. And we have also been able to successfully hire and on Board at scale, throughout the challenging times. Second, we continue to deliver the most complete and cloud native end-to-end observability platform and yet, we are only getting started.
Now, on to a sales and marketing. As you know, this quarter we hosted Dash, our annual user conference. While this was our first time hosting it in an whole virtual format, this enabled us to reach a broader audience of over 7,000 attendee, which is more than five times last years’ count. Dash was a great success, bringing together our customers, prospects and partners to sort of power up Datadog and many of the new products discussed earlier. And I want to give a special thank you to our event and community teams for excellent execution in a quickly shifting environment.
Now let’s discuss some of our wins this quarter. First, I’d highlight three notable upsales that demonstrate the world move to digital channels that has been capitalized by the pandemic and our ability to rapidly scale with our customers. First, the seven figure upsell with a large Latin America e-commerce company that has been handling record level of orders. This company broke down silos and now has 100s of users in Datadog collaborating around the shared view of the IT stack.
Next, a European on-demand delivery company that has seen its business more than doubled from last year and has got into Datadog usage more than four times. The Company has standardized monitoring on Datadog with a seven figure deal between all seven of our platform products, including security to enhance real time threat detection. And last, a US gaming company that have seen material growth in their platform and now has a seven figure commitment to Datadog.
In addition to using all three of our pillars, they are using Datadog to support their server less architecture, to harness [Phonetic] our machine learning to detect anomalies before they occur and they also report on key business metrics with finance and advertising teams. We also had good success with customers from traditional industries that need to transform. We had a six figure new logo win from a 150 years old postal service in Europe. This organization aims to deliver more digital services to its customers, but undergoing a transition to a multi-cloud in containerized environment. They are using four products, including Synthetics to monitor back to the front-end across board on cloud and on-premise environment.
Next, we had a sizable upsell to a European financial service institution. After joining as a customer just over a year ago, this company increased spend more than four times further consolidating [Phonetic] and monitoring on Datadog to now exceed $1 million than they are. Finally, we had an upsell with a 100-year-old global shipping company, which we mentioned on last year’s call for Q3. And then this customer was spending mid six figures on Datadog infrastructure monitoring. Today its customers’ ARR has crossed in to seven figures using infrastructure monitoring APM, Log, Synthetics, RUM, NPM, and Security. This is a great example of not only how companies of all stages are undergoing digital transformation, but also our powerful cross selling motion as we introduce new products to market.
Now moving on to our outlook. As we look ahead to the final quarter of 2020. We continue to be excited about the market opportunity ahead of us and we are confident in our ability to execute continued strong performance through challenging times. After some of the rationalized cloud usage record in Q2, we’ve seen a clear return to normalize this growth. It is apparent that cloud migration is not only resilient in the current environment, but may even go stronger longer term.
Companies globally in the cloud storage [Phonetic] industries are prioritizing their digital operations like never before. And the cloud is a clear strategic winter to enable greater agility and innovation. We continue to believe Datadog is a primary beneficiary of these trends and that we remain very well positioned to win in the market. In other words, for the near term macro environment remains in Turkey and could cause bumps along the way. We are very confident in the long-term opportunity and in our positioning. And we believe that we can continue to sustain strong growth both in the near term and over time.
With that, I would like to turn the call over to our Chief Financial Officer, David Obstler. David?
David Obstler — Chief Financial Officer
Thanks, Olivier. As mentioned, we delivered strong third quarter top and bottom line results amid a difficult macro backdrop. Revenue was $154.7 million up 61% year-over-year, usage trends were robust and returned to more normalized growth after the pressure that we saw in Q2. Meanwhile, platform traction continued to be strong, new logo generation was robust and churn was in line with historical norms.
To provide some more context, first on usage, usage from existing customers was robust and our third quarter dollar based net retention rate remained above 130% with the 13th consecutive quarter. After some pressure seen in Q2 driven by optimization efforts from larger customers that scale in the cloud, Q3 was characterized by a decisive return to more normalized growth from our existing customers. Throughout the quarter, we saw usage growth that was more in line with pre-pandemic historical levels.
The trend was broad based and sustained throughout the quarter. This provides us with confidence that what we experienced in Q2 was a transitory optimization effort that were related to the challenging macro environment, while further optimization may happen periodically as we’ve talked about previously, we feel confident that cloud migration is very much intact and perhaps even strengthening longer term. Recall that we have a ratable SaaS model, therefore while Q3 usage growth was back to pre-COVID levels, the pressure experienced in Q2 can still be seen in our year-over-year comparisons for a number of quarters. Our powerful land and expand model continues to be driven by both usage growth of existing products, as well as the cross-selling to our newer solutions.
Next in the third quarter, we saw continued strength in our platform strategy with over 70% of our customers using two or more products and about 20% of our customers now using four or more products up from only 7% a year ago. Continued product traction is being driven by adoption in the initial land, as well as strong cross selling. The newest products continue to perform well, growing run rate quarter-over-quarter. I’d note that many of them such as RUM, NPM and Security are still early and therefore small contributions to results in the quarter.
Next new logo results were solid with customer additions in line with pre-COVID levels and strength across sales channels and regions. And lastly, churn was stable in line with historical levels and improved from the slight elevation seen in Q2. Our dollar-based gross retention rate has remained largely unchanged in the low to mid-90s.
Now turning to billings, which were $155.9 million, up 39% year-over-year, again an exceptionally difficult compare. We had said that we will provide a pro-forma to more clearly aligned billings growth with the economics and growth of the business. And in Q3, there were a number of timing and duration differences that affected the growth of billings in the quarter. First, on last year’s Q3 call, we had disclosed that there was an invoice timing difference, which increased billings by $6 million. Pro-forma excluding that bill, billings would have been $106.4 million.
Next, in the quarter, we had a $11 million impact to billings and deferred revenue from a few long term large customers, which moved from annual billing to semi-annual or shorter durations upon their renewals. Notably, all of these customers continue to commit on an annual basis. They’re simply breaking up their bills as we talked about on the last call into smaller increments. If we pro-forma for these timing effects, Q3 ’20 billings would have been $166.9 million. So now comparing the pro-forma billings of $166.9 million to the year ago apples-to-apples of $106.4 million, the growth is 57% relatively in line with revenue growth. Remaining performance obligations or RPO was $316 million, up 50% [Phonetic] for the year. Current RPO growth was similar to pro-forma billings growth. As a reminder, billings and RPO can fluctuate as we just discussed versus revenue, based on the timing of invoicing and signing of customer contracts, while revenue incorporates customer usage.
Now let’s review the income statement in more detail. As a reminder, and unless otherwise noted all metrics are non-GAAP. We have provided a reconciliation of GAAP to non-GAAP financials [Technical Issues]. Gross profit in the quarter was $121.5 million, representing a gross margin of 79%. This compares to a gross margin of 80% last quarter and 76% in the year ago period. Year-over-year improvement in gross margin was driven by more efficient use of cloud infrastructure. The slight decrease in gross margin sequentially was due to minor inefficiencies created from our investments in product and platform innovation as we have discussed.
As a reminder, our gross margins may fluctuate quarter-to-quarter within an acceptable range as we prioritize product development and innovation, as well as the build-out of cloud data centers in newer geographies. R&D expense in the quarter was $45.8 million or 30% of revenue compared to 28% a year ago. We’ve continued to invest significantly in R&D, including high growth of our engineering head count. We’ve been able to attract talent and execute on hiring and on-boarding, enabling us to deliver multiple record quarters of engineering head count additions.
We continue to see a meaningful opportunity to innovate and expand our platform and therefore plan to continue to make meaningful investments in R&D. Sales and marketing expense for the quarter was $49.7 million or 32% of revenue compared to 39% in the year-ago period. Similar to R&D, we continue to make substantial investments in sales and marketing, but the pace of revenue growth continues to outpace that investment. This was another quarter of no in-person trade shows or marketing events. While we have successfully redeployed much of the events budget to advertising and other lead generating activities, it was not on a one-for-one base ratio.
G&A expense was $12.1 million or 8% of revenue, slightly lower than the 9% in the year ago quarter and operating income was $13.8 million or 9% operating margin compared to operating income of $726,000 or 1% in the year ago period. In addition to the improvement in gross margin, the continued reduction in marketing events, travel and entertainment and facilities overhead due to COVID, contributed to operating margin.
Head count growth was approximately in line with revenue growth in the quarter. Non-GAAP net income for the quarter was $16 million or $0.05 a share on 333 million weighted average diluted shares. We have a very efficient business model and have experienced a high return on our investments in sales and marketing and R&D. While we have delivered five consecutive quarters of breakeven a positive operating income, we note that our priority remains top line growth and we intend to continue aggressive investments in R&D and go to market.
Finally, turning to the balance sheet and cash flow, we ended the quarter with $1.5 billion in cash, cash equivalents, restricted cash and marketable securities. Cash flow from operations was $36.3 million in the quarter. After taking into consideration capex and capitalized software, free cash flow was $28.6 million in the quarter or margin of 19%. Cash collections have been very strong amid COVID, a testament to the importance of our solution to our customers.
Now I would like to turn to our outlook for the fourth quarter and the full year 2020. While we saw usage growth in Q3 that was consistent with pre-pandemic historical levels, the pandemic is still ongoing and uncertainty remains. Therefore we are being prudent by factoring into our guidance, usage growth trends below what we have seen in Q3 and conservative new business assumptions, as well as continued strong investment in R&D and sales and marketing.
Beginning with the fourth quarter, we expect revenue to be in the range of $162 million to $164 million, which represents year-over-year growth of 43% at the midpoint. Non-GAAP operating income is expected to be in the range of $3 million to $5 million and non-GAAP net income per share is expected to be in the $0.01 per share positive to $0.02 per share based on approximately 335 million weighted average diluted shares outstanding.
And for the full year 2020, revenue is expected to be in the range of $588 million to $590 million, which represent 62% year-over-year growth at the midpoint. Non-GAAP operating income is expected to be in the range of $48.5 million to $50.5 million and non-GAAP net income per share is expected to be in the range of $0.17 to $0.18 per share based on approximately 332 million weighted average diluted shares.
Then some notes below operating income. We expect approximately $1.9 million of quarterly non-GAAP other income, which is net including the interest income on our cash and marketable securities, less the interest expense on our convertible debt. And we do not expect to be a federal taxpayer again, but have a tax provision related to our international entities, which we estimate to be approximately $450,000 in Q4.
To summarize, we are pleased with the results for the quarter. Usage growth was strong as companies are prioritizing cloud migration and digital transformation more than ever and we continue to execute at a high level. We delivered an impressive velocity of product innovation in the quarter and are investing to continue that track record. While uncertainty related to the macro environment remains, we feel very well positioned to capture what is a large and growing long-term market opportunity.
And now with that, we will open the call for questions. Operator, let’s begin the Q&A.
Questions and Answers:
Operator
[Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from Sanjit Singh with Morgan Stanley. Your line is now open.
Sanjit Singh — Morgan Stanley — Analyst
Hi, and thank you for taking the questions and congrats on the Q3 results. David, maybe just to start with you. I think the message I heard off the script was a pretty and static view from your guidance perspective that the cloud rushing that you saw certainly improved, it became less of an issue, expansion trends have like gone back to pre-COVID levels. If you could just bridge for us, the slower revenue growth sort of in the low 60s versus the 80s. But at the same time, I think you mentioned I think Olivier mentioned, a record new ARR quarter. And if I look at kind of the RPO based booking, it seems like there is an acceleration there. If you could sort of just help us understand how those three metrics sort of tied together and give us a sense of whether the business is truly rebounding versus what seems like slower revenue growth?
David Obstler — Chief Financial Officer
Yeah, we had — as you mentioned, organic growth is a very strong contributor and that rebounded particularly in the larger customers to more historical trends, and we continue to have new sales in line, it’s the combination of the two that contributed to the record ARR growth. And so those are the main factors. The organic is always the majority of the growth in a quarter complemented by the new business.
Olivier Pomel — Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder
And just to complement on that, this is Olivier, if you compare it to last year, so one thing to remember is we have a ratable SaaS model. So the growth we did forego in Q2 is going to be with us in the year-to-year comparison little bit. Last year at the same time we had an acceleration also, which makes it for a tougher compare. And it’s going to — the increases in ARR only show up in revenue when they’re actually incurred in the usage. So it depends on when we added those in the quarter and also put the flexibility of ARR was in Q2. So basically this is how you bridge the record ARR with the revenue as it were not record.
Sanjit Singh — Morgan Stanley — Analyst
Okay. Understood. That makes sense. And then Olivier, on the partnership front, you signed a follow-on partnership with Google Cloud that you announced today, and then you signed another strategic partnership with Azure sort of intra-quarter. On the Azure front, can you sort of frame out what the opportunity is here? Give us a sense of what Azure represents as part of the business today. And with the ability of customers to sort of draw down on their Azure credits using Datadog, how much of an opportunity is this in terms of sustaining revenue growth or potentially accelerating revenue growth with this Azure partnership? If you can just sort of frame out the opportunity for us that would be great.
Olivier Pomel — Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder
Yeah. So, first all I should say we already have customers, non-stop providers. We’ve been working with them before. So today our customer distribution follows a little bit the arrival of the cloud providers. So we still have many more customers and more revenue volume on AWS, for example than we do in Azure. We — what’s interesting with this new partnership is that we get more tightly integrated into the Azure console itself and we’re the first vendor to do that.
What’s interesting there is the user base for Azure tends to be a bit more homogeneous or used to be a bit more homogeneous in the technology they use mostly for Microsoft. And so the ability to be more integrated with the Microsoft really can reduce friction and help onboard new customers onto our platform. So we see that as a great opportunity to get more customers and more usage from Azure as Azure itself is growing and as their customers are diversifying their tech stack. I should say that, this is only one of the cloud providers we’re working with. We have — we’re active on all of the other platforms. We announced another partnership with GCP today. We have another one with AWS. So this is an evolution not a revolution.
To your point also, our customers can use their Azure credits and there will be some cross-selling involved with the Microsoft team. So we’re excited about the lift in go-to-market there. One last thing to remember is that this is still in preview. So the — we don’t expect any significant volume fallout in the near term. That’s something that we’re going to kick in over the next few quarters.
Sanjit Singh — Morgan Stanley — Analyst
Understood. Thanks, Olivier. Appreciate it.
Operator
Our next question comes from Sterling Auty with JPMorgan. Your line is now open.
Sterling Auty — JPMorgan — Analyst
Yeah. Thanks. Hi, guys. Oli, you kind of answered it with your last comment there, but I just want to make sure that we level set, excuse me, in terms of the timing of the ramp of the partnerships not only for Azure, but also what you announced with Google as well. How should we think of the timing of that flowing into revenue?
Olivier Pomel — Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder
It’s not going to be immediate, all right. So the Azure one is just in preview right now. It’s not completely live yet. The GCP partnership involves a number of new technical things need to happen, but also some new go-to-market motions we’re putting in place. So there’s not going to be an immediate impact, but we see that as being potentially meaningful contributed in the mid to long term.
Sterling Auty — JPMorgan — Analyst
That makes perfect sense. And just one follow-on to that. Are we looking at across the three pillars or just specifically for infrastructure on both of these partnerships?
Olivier Pomel — Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder
Well, the entry point for most of our customers is usually infrastructure. But the — as we mentioned earlier in the call, in 75% of the cases it also comes in with another, of our products. So we see that really as a get way into the platform and then a way for us to have customers use all three or four products in the end.
Sterling Auty — JPMorgan — Analyst
Got it. Thank you.
Operator
Our next question comes from Chris Merwin with Goldman Sachs. Your line is now open.
Chris Merwin — Goldman Sachs — Analyst
Great. Thanks very much for taking question. I was hoping you could talk a bit about what you saw across the customer segments in the quarter. I think you mentioned that the strength was pretty broad-based. But I guess within the enterprise segment specifically are you starting to see more standardization around the Datadog platform not just with infrastructure obviously, but the log APM? And of course there’s much, much broader suite of products that you now offer?
Olivier Pomel — Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder
Yeah. That’s definitely what we see. I mean, we see — I think, it’s very obvious for customers that they need to integrate various parts of observability together and then having all that on top of the same platform is desired outcome. So we see more and more of that, but it’s not specific to the enterprise. We see that happening over all segments at this point.
Chris Merwin — Goldman Sachs — Analyst
Great. And maybe just a follow-up. In terms of usage stepping back up it’s very encouraging to hear. As you talk to customers, is there any pushback on pricing? I mean, I would think not given that you’re saying usage step back up here, but just curious what those conversations have been like and how you’re thinking about the pricing model from here. Or is there something that really works well for your customer base as it is and there’s unlikely to be any evolution of that? Thanks.
Olivier Pomel — Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder
Yeah. Look the one thing I should say is anytime you charge customers for millions of dollars, they’re going to ask questions about the price. It’s the whole department in enterprises that are built just for that. That being said at the end of the day what matters is how much value you deliver for that price. And I think for that we’re doing a pretty good job.
I think the one thing everybody is grappling with and as more and more applications moving to the cloud and those applications generate more and more data, what’s the best way to align how is that is being used for observability reasons, for security reasons and for other reasons to align that with all the value with the price being paid. And when you look at our product offering and what we’ve been adding that’s why we’ve added all of these new SKUs to really unbundle what we’re doing with the data, so customers can really buy to align with the needs they have.
For example, we announced more recently treating without limits, which is a way to send extremely large amounts of data to our APM, but only retain the part of it that actually makes sense to customers and they want to retain long term. We’ve done the same thing we love before. We’re doing something with our infrastructure product. These are the way we basically put our customers in control so they can align what they pay with the value they get.
Chris Merwin — Goldman Sachs — Analyst
Great. Thank you.
Operator
Our next question comes from Brad Zelnick with Credit Suisse. Your line is now open.
Brad Zelnick — Credit Suisse — Analyst
Great. Thanks so much, and congrats on another strong quarter and really nice to see usage growth returning to more normal levels. David, as investors try to think about the growth algorithm for Datadog in the years to come, clearly, you’re levered to digital transformations and cloud migration. And we can look to many proxies for this opportunity perhaps the growth rates of the large public clouds themselves which by the way great to see the deeper partnerships with Microsoft and Google.
But I’d be curious to know how internally from a planning perspective, how you all think about this? And although I get you’re not going to give us guidance right now for next year, how should we think about how you’re framing it and the rate of investment against that opportunity? And along with that how would you characterize the ability to hire in this environment?
David Obstler — Chief Financial Officer
Yeah. Good question. So on revenue, we said that over — about 60% of our revenue growth comes from existing customers. So we start with the land and expand and look at those cohorts inorganic. And I think we referred to looking at pre-pandemic and historical trends. So that’s at the sort of lynchpin making the business relatively predictable even in uncertain times. And then we look at the market size, the opportunity which tends not to be a limit. And so what is, is that the execution, how many salespeople we get in how we can ramp them etc.
And we then essentially have some experience in understanding ramp and understanding productivity. And those are the algorithms we use in looking at growth. I think we feel and we said this over and over again that there’s a very big market and we’re very early on. So both in terms of product investment, but also in go to market there’s a lot of areas that we are still building out. There are a lot of opportunities. There are a lot of successful territories where we have to put more feet on the street. So we tend to build that from a bottom-up with sales headcount.
And that’s resulted in sales and capacity as we’ve talked about in the 60% to 70% growth. And we see that and we see that opportunity and based on our success in bringing people in and getting them productive. As Oli mentioned we have been successful in COVID in hiring and it hasn’t really held us back. We’ve seen a lot of good opportunity and continue to do that throughout the pandemic.
Olivier Pomel — Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder
Yeah. And I’ll complement that. Sorry, I’ll just complement that on the growth side. I mean right now we’re so early in the opportunity that the way we think about the way we grow our team isn’t directly related to the way we think about the growth we’re going to get next year. We really think of it in terms of how fast we can grow them while optimizing for both short-term and long-term growth. So we are growing the team as fast as we can basically and we think there’s enough opportunity to justify it. And that’s true both on the R&D side and on the sales and marketing side which we are in and we are very convinced that the opportunity is there. And just to put that into — to frame that a little bit we’re growing a lot faster than the cloud providers as a whole which would mean plenty, plenty of market for us to get.
Brad Zelnick — Credit Suisse — Analyst
Thank you for that. Maybe just a follow-up and perhaps put a finer point on this correlation of sales headcount growth with top line growth, just as the portfolio continues to expand especially recently with Dash all the new product announcements, how should we think about the evolution of the sales force to drive efficient cross-selling and specialization that might be required in order to hit all the different buyers and cover all of the product capabilities within the customer base? Are there — do you envision having to make any significant changes in the go-to-market?
Olivier Pomel — Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder
It’s very possible. Every company that — which is a large scale and grows at some point start specializing their sales force. We haven’t had to do that at this point. And I would say, we’re optimistic that for the observability part of the stack at this point we’d be very successful at having one sales team sell that. I think the issue might come first for the new categories we’re entering such as security where the barriers might be a little bit different. There again these products are new enough. And the customer base is for these products and the I would say the customers for which these products are mature not are a small enough group targeting enough group that we don’t need to specialize for 30 years that’s definitely something that’s on our minds for the future.
Brad Zelnick — Credit Suisse — Analyst
Excellent. Thanks so much for the thorough explanation, guys. Congrats again.
Olivier Pomel — Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder
Thank you.
Operator
Our next question comes from Raimo Lenschow with Barclays. Your line is now open.
Raimo Lenschow — Barclays — Analyst
Yes. Two quick questions and congrats from me as well. Olivier like what are you seeing in terms of competitive dynamics? So we had like some one wonder in your — in the broader space is kind of bring pricing down like crazy and it’s doing a lot of free stuff. Other guys are just trying to broaden the portfolio coming up with new cloud product — just a word on what are you seeing in that space?
Olivier Pomel — Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder
So broadly, there’s no change. The space is very much the same as it’s been for the past few years. We don’t see anything different today with customers. We don’t see anything different in the adoption cycle. We hear a lot about it so around earnings time. But that’s about it.
Raimo Lenschow — Barclays — Analyst
Okay. Perfect. Thank you. And then as you think about like as you kind of look at the landing motion and — more the landing motion with all your new customers have you seen like a change in terms of what people are taking up? You mentioned at the beginning of the call, a couple of extra stats around how many modules etc. But do you see a change in nature in terms of people understanding observability better and kind of going from more than just infrastructure and just kind of thinking more about this whole thing holistically. What are your observations there? Thank you.
Olivier Pomel — Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder
Yeah. This definitely customers expect definitely to get to do more with observability than just infrastructure, I would say. The field is there. It’s understanding what it needs better there. At the same time, when we land with customers, the balancing act is between having them use more products on day one, but also slowing down the landing which is why the number has been pretty stable around 75% of the land that, include two or more products. I think that corresponds to the right balance right now between landing fast and landing with more than one product. Again, landing fast is critical. Like it’s a very important part of our business and we’ve been very successful with our infrastructure products in particular.
Raimo Lenschow — Barclays — Analyst
Okay. Perfect. Thank you. Congrats.
Operator
Our next question comes from Matt Hedberg with RBC Capital Markets. Your line is now open.
Matt Hedberg — RBC Capital Markets — Analyst
Great. Thanks for taking my question. At Dash, it was really good to hear the application marketplace going GA really seems to open up a nice halo effect for developers to build application on your platform. Can you talk a little bit more about what sort of interest you’re having from developers? And ultimately, you’re not alone in software vendors doing this. How do you think about monetizing this? Or is it more of just trying to build up more awareness for additional features that you don’t deliver as first-party features yourself?
Olivier Pomel — Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder
Well, it’s a collection of all of these, right? I think, we’re still super early in this. At this point, we’re working with our very first few partners to make sure that we define — we develop the platform in a way that serves go to them. And we think, if we make them successful, they’ll make us successful in the long run.
So as far as monetization comes in, we worry about them more than we worry about us at this point, just to make sure they’re successful and they get what they want out of it. So super early, we think it’s important. We think it’s going to play a dividend in the future but we have many, many, more quarters of innovation to come on these to fully deliver on the business.
Matt Hedberg — RBC Capital Markets — Analyst
That’s great. And then maybe just one for David, your explanation of billings was super helpful. Just trying to — kind of think about that on a normalized basis given all the nuances from Q3 of last year. I guess, I’m curious though, when we look at deferred revenue this quarter and maybe there’s an obvious answer to this. But it looked kind of sequentially flat. Was there anything that impacted deferred this quarter not necessarily looking on a year-over-year basis but just sequentially from Q2 to Q3?
David Obstler — Chief Financial Officer
Yeah. It’s the same factor that resulted in the pro forma analysis. There were $11 million of billings from some large customers that had — would have been 100% in billing, which were chunked up anywhere from semi-annual to monthly billing. So the way to look at that, and do the apples-to-apples would be at that same $11 million, which reflects the economics, and you’ll see the deferred revenue in the mid-50s like the other metrics that we talked about.
Matt Hedberg — RBC Capital Markets — Analyst
I got it. So really just a relic of what happened last year then repeating itself this year the renewals?
David Obstler — Chief Financial Officer
Exactly. It’s — its deals that renewed annually and grew and as we said last time that we’re trying to work with our clients, keep the commitment. These are some very long term large customers, who are staying with us, but to accommodate them in this environment in their request to chunk up build that’s what it is.
Matt Hedberg — RBC Capital Markets — Analyst
Got it. Makes a lot of sense. Thanks guys.
David Obstler — Chief Financial Officer
Thank you.
Olivier Pomel — Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder
And just a point on that. We’ll see more of that in the future, right? I mean the beauty of our model is because of the efficiency of our go-to-market, we don’t actually care if customers pay us upfront; we want to align with them on that. And so we’re — I’m pretty sure we’ll see more of that as we grow.
Operator
Our next question comes from Brent Thill with Jefferies. Your line is now open.
Brent Thill — Jefferies — Analyst
David, I’m curious if you could just expand on the normalization comment, you mentioned from Q2 to Q3 add a little more detail in terms of just overall customer behavior. And I’m curious if you could also just drill down on the security initiative what you’re seeing there and what metrics are standing out to you from that business unit? Thank you.
David Obstler — Chief Financial Officer
Yeah. Let me just go over some of the metrics around organic growth and then Oli to Security. So what we said in Q2 was that we had some of the larger customers rationalize. So, therefore, the slowdown of organic was concentrated first in the larger customers and that about 10% of our customer base and ARR was in impacted industries where there was some pressure.
And what we saw in Q3 was sort of return to normalcy in those, meaning the larger customers continue to now after that optimization grow in pre-pandemic rates. And we also saw that the COVID impacted — the impact was taken the medicine was taken and they also continue to be stable to slightly up. So essentially it was across enterprise mid-market and SMB. And it was across also the large customer the small customer that exhibited similar types of organic growth, which is what we’ve seen over the long period in the company but saw a different effect in Q2. Oli on Security?
Olivier Pomel — Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder
Yes. On Security, I think it’s too early to have a lot to share there, but the product is growing very nicely. We’re getting great adoption stories from customers but it’s growing very quickly from a very small number. So — and it’s still very early in its life cycle. So we fleshed out the offering a little bit at Dash with the compliance product. There’s a lot more we’re working on both of the existing base and on new base for security, so let’s say it’s still early.
And just to restate some of what David said on the growth, we’re very happy with the growth we’ve seen in Q3. It really showed a reversion to normal for the month-to-month growth. I mean if you look at the most growth in ARR any of the month in Q3 like it could have slowed this month in Q3 or Q4 — sorry in Q4 or Q1 they would have sit right there. So I think it’s not that we’re very happy with what we’ve seen. At the same time, we’re still very careful about because we don’t — in the macro backdrop, we still question what can happen towards the end of Q4.
Brent Thill — Jefferies — Analyst
Thank you.
Operator
Our next question comes from Robert Majek with Raymond James. Your line is now open.
Robert Majek — Raymond James — Analyst
Great. Thanks. As part of the continual shift to a more multi-silo approach, curious if you could elaborate on the experience for results you’ve had as of late penetrating further into the log monitoring pillar?
Olivier Pomel — Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder
Into the log monitoring, you said?
Robert Majek — Raymond James — Analyst
That’s correct.
Olivier Pomel — Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder
Yeah. I mean look the log product is in hyper growth right? And it’s a very exciting and also a challenging one for customers because it’s one of the products, for which is the easiest to generate a lot of fairly useless data and have to pay for it, which is why a lot of the innovations we’ve made initially on that product were around giving customers more control to align what they pay with the value they get. So we’ve done quite a bit of that.
As we keep growing that product we’re getting into situations where customers are not standardizing on us for all of their observability including logs. And we’ve been basically pulled by our enterprise customers to add a lot of the enterprise features that they would expect from a platform that they and all of their extremely confidential data into. So that’s a lot to do what we’ve been doing more recently.
Robert Majek — Raymond James — Analyst
And I know we’re just three months out of Dash, but how has customer feedback been so far and some of the new announced products and features? What’s resonated the most with customers?
Olivier Pomel — Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder
It’s interesting because it’s — we’ve announced many new products and they all got quite a bit of attention. I would say we’ve got quite a few eyes on the new incident management product which is only in beta. We’ve got a lot of excitement for the profiler product. So, there’s a number of different things that customers are excited about from Dash.
I think we still have in all of those cases it’s still early for those products. So, we still have to fully bring them to market. For most of them we still have to charge for them. And we have to basically work with our customers to make sure that these products fully deliver on their promise and our vision. But that’s the way we build, right?
The way we build is we build with our customers. We put the products in their hands. We make sure they see the value. We make sure they have the controls so they can align what they pay with the value they get and then we grow those customers on those products.
Robert Majek — Raymond James — Analyst
Great. Thanks.
Operator
Our next question comes from Brad Reback with Stifel. Your line is now open.
Brad Reback — Stifel — Analyst
Great. Thanks very much. Oli as your product set continues to diversify and the revenue stream with it, do you think that has any impact on gross margin longer term? Thanks.
Olivier Pomel — Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder
Today we don’t think so. There’s no reason to think we’re going get this in the model we have so far. We might still see some fluctuation mostly because of the back and forth between building more products and optimizing our use of the infrastructure because they are the same engineers that do both and also because of our expansion to new geographies and new data sets and things like that which might push down a little bit. But there’s no reason to believe that we’re headed into a completely different ZIP code there at least not today.
Brad Reback — Stifel — Analyst
Great. Thanks very much.
Operator
Our next question comes from Jack Andrews with Needham. Your line is now open.
Jack Andrews — Needham — Analyst
Great. Thanks and congratulations on the results. I was wondering if you could just perhaps frame for us what percentage of your deals today are partner sourced and just how we should be thinking about new logos that could be generated from your partnership ecosystem given the launch of your partner network I think in January of this year.
Olivier Pomel — Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder
Yes, today it’s a very small part of our business that is partner-sourced. And so all of the partnerships we’ve discussed are basically all upside for us. And that’s why we’re investing in all of those. We think there’s a number of we can get thanks to these partners. And we’re investing in the partner organization in general. We launched our partner program earlier this year. It’s starting to see a bit amount of success but it’s still a small part of the business.
Jack Andrews — Needham — Analyst
Okay. Thanks. And then if I could ask as a quick follow-up could you describe some of the if you need to make some go-to-market changes in particular to scale your federal business and how we should be thinking about how big this business could become relative to some of your other vertical markets?
Olivier Pomel — Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder
Yeah. So we started building a team for that right? And we are as you know we have a number of things in process for FedRAMP and etc. We think it’s going to be similar in many ways to the way we sell to other customers and different in a few other ways. In terms of the importance of the business, we think it can be a big part of the business. And if you look at other communities in comparable spaces like it is a big part of their business but providers or other vendors in security or observability. So, we believe that there’s really a good opportunity there. So, again, this is all upside for us.
Jack Andrews — Needham — Analyst
Got it. Thanks for your perspective and thanks for taking my questions.
Operator
Our next question comes from Ittai Kidron with Oppenheimer. Your line is now open.
Ittai Kidron — Oppenheimer — Analyst
Thanks. Oli, I’ll start with you on the cloud partnerships that you’ve talked about and mentioned before. Can you highlight what’s unique? Or — first of all is there anything exclusive in those relationships, number one? And number two, in what way will it be either easy or difficult for some of your competitors to replicate either the quality of the relationship or the depth of the relationship with those client guys?
Olivier Pomel — Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder
Well I mean there’s nothing exclusive in most of these relationships, right? But in many situations like the way they are implemented and what the [Indecipherable] is really different. And they’re also different depending on the cloud provider we work with. So for example, the way we integrate — we’re going to integrate with Azure plugs directly to their console which is not the case with some of the other cloud providers. So that’s something that’s interesting there.
Now in terms of what others could or could not do it’s hard for me to comment. I mean I believe that it’s software so we can do it. Others might be able to do it. I think what we’ve proven time and time again is that, because of the overall structure of our products, because of the structure of our customer base not go to market, we end up having a product that is a lot easier and has a lot of traction to adopt and ends up being more widely adopted by our customers and more successful in the end. And I think that’s what we — that would guide basically the way we run all those partnerships. So what attracted us to the edge partnership with the ability to reduce friction there. And that’s why we decided to invest in that first.
Ittai Kidron — Oppenheimer — Analyst
That’s great. And then David a question for you again, sorry going back to that duration on that large customers, the $11 million. Can you at least confirm that those customers have expanded at your — roughly your net dollar expansion rate? Just trying to make sure that this isn’t just taking a bill and splitting it by half but he was taking a bigger bill and splitting it by half?
David Obstler — Chief Financial Officer
Yes. No they’ve been customers that have grown substantially. One of them is a customer that’s more than doubled over the last year or so. So this is merely that we have changed the billing terms but they are all customers that have been growing with us over the last few years.
Ittai Kidron — Oppenheimer — Analyst
Got it. And then lastly on your underlying assumption for some softness in usage in your 4Q guide, half pretty much into the quarter. It doesn’t sound like there has been any unusual usage softness in that 1.5 months, correct me if I’m wrong. So aren’t you just being a little bit too conservative here? I mean what is it the scenario that truly worries you with so little time left in the quarter?
David Obstler — Chief Financial Officer
Yes. I think just overall we’ve tended to be conservative in our guidance to incorporate usage growth rates that are lower than what we have seen and new logo accumulation that’s lower. And I think we said last time, that given that velocity and the fact that we’re in the pandemic and we can’t predict what might happen around the world, we wanted to continue to roll that conservatism forward. So it’s really that at the core of the guidance rather than anything that in particular that we’ve seen that’s different than what we said on the call today.
Ittai Kidron — Oppenheimer — Analyst
Very good. Good luck, guys.
David Obstler — Chief Financial Officer
Yes.
Operator
Our next question comes from Bhavan Suri with William Blair. Your line is now open.
Bhavan Suri — William Blair — Analyst
Hey, gents. Thanks for taking my question. Olivier, I guess I’ll touch on first a little bit about the technology architecture. This comes up a lot even we’re talking to investors. Maybe a little help in understanding. So today when you look at sort of even the infrastructure monitoring space and the way data works in the sampling model with logs, which data makes sense or it doesn’t. But this is idea that with sampling you’re not getting all the data and some of the vendors in other markets are saying, we can absorb all the data. How do you think about that? And would it be difficult for you to absorb all the data? Is that too much data with the…
Olivier Pomel — Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder
We totally absorb all the data. We totally absorb all the data. Absolutely. There’s no sampling. Sampling is something customers can choose to do if they don’t want to retain everything and store everything. But absolutely, we take all the data. And actually one thing we announced recently with our treating without limit product. It actually allows us to be — we’re the only ones to actually take absolutely 100% of the data sent to our infrastructure and available in the real-time even in extremely high volume environment and then we go to environments where they’re keeping track of millions and millions of requests per second.
So we do that and it’s not something that the other vendors don’t do. So we — there’s no sampling required. Sampling it’s just the way for customers to decide, hey, the millions and millions of debug logs, my developers are sending, I only need to keep 10% of them to see what’s going on as they written that in storage for a longer time and for many checks without having to pay for that.
Bhavan Suri — William Blair — Analyst
Great. I appreciate the clarity. And my second one is kind of a more longer-term question, but it’s about the machine learning. So, some of the other vendors in marketing heavily the focal point of machine learning. And I’d love to understand sort of how you think about that vis-a-vis competition? And so to what extent are you seeing APM customers, especially leverage the Watchdog automatic anomaly detection service you introduced maybe news last year, 12 months ago. So I’d love to understand a little bit of the thought process there.
Olivier Pomel — Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder
Yeah. So, a couple of ways in the case. So the first one is we actually think it’s a because of the model and we are fully SaaS, machine learning is a strength of ours, because we actually see all of the data we can train or algorithms of all of the data. We can seek to choose the problems and the use cases that we want to solve with machine learning, which is the ones that we don’t. So it actually strengthens the long-term structural strength for what we do.
That being said, we don’t like to lead with the promise — the promise of an AI that teaches everything for you, because we think in general those promises under deliver. They look great in the demo. But then a number of specific states you’re going to find them to fall short and that’s not what we want. And that’s true of pretty much all the products you see there today.
So our approach is to basically under-promise and over-deliver and we think we have long-term structural strength in there because of the way run of products and the data line that we see, which is not something that most of us competes can do or have.
Now in terms of the adoption, we see — we’ve been purposefully selective in the situation in use cases we saw with Datadog today. But we see without being used by our customers in real situations and they rely on it and that’s something that we keep building upon.
Bhavan Suri — William Blair — Analyst
Got it. Got it. Thanks for the color. Congrats and thanks for the commentary you’ve done.
Olivier Pomel — Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder
Thank you.
Operator
Our last question comes from the line of Andrew Nowinski with D.A. Davidson. Your line is now open.
Andrew Nowinski — D.A. Davidson — Analyst
All right. Thank you for squeezing me in. Just a quick clarification on the billings. I understand the larger customers are growing at pre-pandemic levels and your COVID-impacted companies are slightly up. So it sounds like the environment and the usage, the cloud usage significantly improved from Q2 to Q3. But I’m wondering if you look at your billings on a sequential basis after — even after normalizing that is only up $6 million sequentially despite that significant improvement in the environment. So I am wondering is there any other factors there that we should consider, given that the billings only went up $6 million?
David Obstler — Chief Financial Officer
No, we said all along that, billings has to do with when bills went out. The advice is to take the revenues for the quarter and then multiply that by 34% 35% or something. And that’s the — and then times 12 and that’s sort of the linearity. And that’s what drives the business. What we’re doing with billings, despite the fact we don’t run is, we’re trying to clean away some of the noise of when a bill went out this quarter versus that quarter, which isn’t germane to the top line growth of the business. So I would say, urging everyone back towards the ARR approximation and the top line and we’re just basically giving pro-formas here, which all are sort of in the 50s percent and RPO, et cetera, which is more in line with revenue growth.
Andrew Nowinski — D.A. Davidson — Analyst
Okay. And then, I’m just wondering if, just — could you touch on the competitive landscape both for the APM space, as well as log management? Thank you.
Olivier Pomel — Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder
Yes, we’d like to know in the community space. I mean, it’s very much a same as it used to be, fortunately or unfortunately a little bit boring. So any particular question on the computing space?
Andrew Nowinski — D.A. Davidson — Analyst
Well, have you seen any sort of win rate improvement now that your cloud usage is certainly getting better? I’m just wondering if your win rates have improved versus competitors like Splunk and Elastic and the log management space, or Dynatrace and New Relic, because they get different pricing changes.
Olivier Pomel — Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder
Most of our business is not replacements, right. Most of our business is net new. So the — we do see some replacements from time to time, but that’s a small minority of the accounts will end. The world is moving to the cloud. Most companies are new to cloud. Most companies are new to this environment and maybe observability and don’t have anything yet in that cloud environment, even if they have on-prem and they start using us for that. I don’t have a win rate improvement to report, but I’m also not unhappy about win rate. Actually, I don’t even look that often at win rates, because that’s not what drives most of the acquisition for us.
Andrew Nowinski — D.A. Davidson — Analyst
Okay. Thanks.
Operator
That concludes today’s question-and-answer session. I’d like to turn the call back to Olivier Pomel for closing remarks.
Olivier Pomel — Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder
Thank you. One second. My apologies. My one-year old was just barging in. That’s what you do — what you get for working from home. In any case, in closing, I’d like to reiterate that we are very pleased with our performance in the third quarter. I’m very proud of our execution and I want to thank our employees for the strong productivity that they’ve shown during the quarter.
We recently said that we’d do 10 years anniversary this summer. And I want to say, I’m incredibly proud of the culture we created, incredibly proud of the work, with a calculation of the value we deliver to our customers. But I’m even more excited about our future, the strength of our team and about the magnitude of opportunity. So in other words, the message you should get from this call is that we’re just getting started and we’re also very excited about it. Thank you all for attending.
David Obstler — Chief Financial Officer
Thanks.
Operator
[Operator Closing Remarks]