Categories Earnings Call Transcripts, Technology

Fiverr International Ltd (NYSE: FVRR) Q1 2020 Earnings Call Transcript

FVRR Earnings Call - Final Transcript

Fiverr International Ltd (FVRR) Q1 2020 earnings call dated May. 07, 2020

Corporate Participants:

Jinjin Qian — Vice President, Strategic Finance

Micha Kaufman — Co-Founder, Chief Executive Officer & Director

Ofer Katz — Chief Financial Officer

Analysts:

Douglas Anmuth — JP Morgan — Analyst

Nathaniel Schindler — Bank of America Merrill Lynch — Analyst

Ronald Josey — JMP Securities — Analyst

Bradley Erickson — Needham & Company — Analyst

Jason Helfstein — Oppenheimer — Analyst

Eric Sheridan — UBS — Analyst

Drew Kootman — Cantor Fitzgerald — Analyst

Presentation:

Operator

Hello and welcome to the Fiverr First Quarter Fiscal 2020 earnings conference call. [Operator Instructions]

I would now like to turn the conference over to Jinjin Qian. Please go ahead.

Jinjin Qian — Vice President, Strategic Finance

Thank you, operator, and good morning ladies and gentlemen. Thank you for joining us on Fiverr’s earnings conference call for the first quarter ended March 31, 2020. Please note that this call is being webcast on the Investor Relations section of the company’s website. Full details of our results and additional management commentary are available in our shareholder letter, which can be found on the Investor Relations section of our website at investors.fiverr.com. Joining me today on the call are Micha Kaufman, Founder and CEO; and Ofer Katz, CFO.

Before we start, I’d like to remind you that certain matters discussed today are forward-looking statements that are subject to risks and uncertainties relating to future events and/or the future financial performance of Fiverr. Actual results could differ materially from those anticipated in these forward-looking statements. Additional information that could cause actual results to differ from forward-looking statements can be found in Fiverr’s periodic public filings with the US Securities and Exchange Commission, including those factors discussed under the Risk Factor section in Fiverr’s 20-F filed with the SEC. The forward-looking statements in this conference call are based on the current expectations as of today, and Fiverr assumes no obligation to update or revise them, whether as a result of new developments or otherwise.

And now, I’ll turn the call over to Micha.

Micha Kaufman — Co-Founder, Chief Executive Officer & Director

Thank you, Jinjin. Good morning, everyone, and thanks for taking the time to join us on the call today. Before launching into our financial results, I would like to acknowledge this challenging time that we are all facing. My hope is that you are all staying safe, and our immense gratitude goes out to the doctors, nurses, first responders and everyone who worked on the front line of essential services to keep us all safe and healthy.

Today, Fiverr reported strong Q1 results with revenue growing 44% year-over-year. This represents a third consecutive quarter of accelerating growth in beating our prior expectations across all metrics. We also significantly narrowed our EBITDA loss by 1,430 basis points, and are on accelerated path toward profitability. All of this was achieved amid a global pandemic that has shocked, humbled and tested our society as a whole.

At Fiverr, we are proud and fortunate that we have the ability to step up and be there for our community. For buyers, Fiverr is a place to build and expand their online presence even if they don’t have the skills or tools to do so themselves. It is a place to find the team and collaborate even when hiring an employee becomes impossible. And it is a place for businesses to get more things done with more efficient budgets and resources. For sellers, Fiverr is an increasingly important source of income as we enable them to find remote work opportunities, engage with their clients and deliver digital services, all without leaving their homes.

In our COVID-19 update to shareholders in early April, we mentioned how our business experienced a brief period of volatility in mid-March and quickly rebounded and resumed strong growth within a couple of weeks. Since then, we have continued to gain significant momentum every week across all cohorts, all verticals and all geographies. Weekly GMV on our core marketplace has accelerated on a year-over-year basis for every week in April for a total of six consecutive weeks since mid-March. We hit all-time daily revenue records 4 times in April, despite the fact that April typically is not a seasonally strong month with Easter holidays. All of our existing cohorts have rebounded strongly from March volatility, not only back to their historical pattern of contributing a consistent stream of revenue but also beyond those levels with increasing revenues. We believe this resiliency underscores the loyalty of our existing buyer base.

We are also experiencing a strong uplift on new buyer acquisition driven by an unprecedented jump in organic awareness and attractive opportunities in performance marketing. All verticals have rebounded with similar trends to the overall marketplace, and we have seen particular strength in categories related to moving businesses from offline to online as well as digital content related categories, such as gaming, social media, online lessons and ebooks. Last but not least, we are seeing the strength of our business not only in the US but across the world, especially in several European countries where our timely investments in local expansion were in place right around the time when global stay-at-home orders intensified. Both new sellers and new buyers registration have been particularly strong in Spain and France in recent weeks.

I’m incredibly grateful and proud of the resilience, adaptability and dedication of our team across the world. Circumstances evolved rapidly and not only did our team rise to the occasion in terms of executing numerous initiatives to help our buyers and sellers navigate through COVID-19, but they also succeeded in executing our existing road map often ahead of schedule. Complex and groundbreaking products, such as Promoted Gigs and machine translation to localize our user-generated content were successfully rolled out. Beautiful marketing campaigns were created and executed even when everything in the original plan had to be scrapped due to the global travel ban. A record number of community events with a record number of global participants were hosted virtually during the quarter, at a time when social distancing has cut down our human interaction everywhere.

To ensure that we leave enough time to take your questions, we have included a detailed account of our extensive list of initiatives following the COVID-19 outbreak in our letter to shareholders. Our team has demonstrated the strength of our culture by moving smoothly to the stay-at-home reality and embracing the responsibility we have to our community in these testing times. I will be happy to take questions regarding our approach to helping our community. While the future is in many ways still uncertain, when we take a step back and look at the ways COVID-19 has touched Fiverr, our buyers, our sellers and the way we enable work, we have never been more confident about our mission, our business model and our growth path forward.

Fiverr’s mission of connecting businesses and freelancers around the world and enabling remote work to be done digitally through our platform has never been more critical. As the crisis reinforces and accelerates the trends towards adopting remote work and moving businesses online, we believe our marketplace is well positioned to both address current needs and to be a key resource when the economy reaccelerates.

We run a horizontal marketplace with one of the largest service catalogs in the world. Our revenue diversification across all the categories and our ability to identify market trends and expand our catalog to meet those trends quickly provide us with a tremendous amount of defensibility and growth ammunition, given the constantly evolving user preference and macro environment. We enjoy an expansive and well diversified global buyer base that stays active with us and contributes to the continuous and durable revenue streams for a very long time. Our bottom-up approach of our go-to-market strategy is highly viral, and we enjoy increasing word-of-mouth benefits as we scale. Our agile data driven and efficient marketing strategy also allows us to find, target and acquire relevant buyers without the need of a sales force or a long sales cycle.

Talent is global, and so is the demand for talent. Our recent progress on international expansion and the encouraging results in those countries continues to reaffirm this belief and signals the huge market opportunity globally. We are taking a disciplined approach and developing a repeatable playbook in order to drive long-term and sustainable growth in those countries.

Fiverr celebrated its 10th anniversary in February, and there was much to celebrate. But we have barely scratched the surface of the large opportunity ahead of us. I can confidently say that, as a company, growth will continue to be our top priority for many years ahead.

And with that, I’m going to turn it over to Ofer, who will share with you a few financial highlights. Ofer?

Ofer Katz — Chief Financial Officer

Thank you, and good morning, everyone. I’d like to join Micha in acknowledging this difficult time. I hope that you and those important to you are safe and healthy. As Micha mentioned, Fiverr’s business has stayed strong and resilient during this uncertain time. In Q1, revenue grew 44% year-over-year to $34.2 million. This was driven by 17% growth in active buyers, 18% growth in spend per buyer and a 90 basis point improvement in take rate. The strong momentum we had during the first two months of the quarter, together with strong rebound when we exited the quarter muted the impact from the short period of volatility during mid-March. As a result, we were able to deliver growth metrics that were stronger than expected across the board.

We also continue to be highly efficient on the marketing front. Trends from both organic and paid channels continued to be strong and benefited from the continued momentum from last year, the increase of channels diversification and the uplift from international expansion. The development of COVID-19 also drove higher word-of-mouth impact for Fiverr as people spent more time online, engaged via social media and consume online content. We have also moderately stepped up our marketing investment in recent weeks as the less competitive advertising space opened additional performance marketing opportunities for us.

The flow-through of strong top line growth in Q1 2020 has led to strong gross margin, EBITDA margin and operating cash flow improvement during the quarter. Non-GAAP gross margin was 81.6%, representing 60 basis points improvement year-over-year. Adjusted EBITDA margin was negative 8.4%, a year-over-year improvement of 1,430 basis points, primarily driven by improving leverage in R&D and seller marketing. Operating cash flow turned positive in Q1 as strong top line growth and improvement in gross margin and operating leverage led to significant EBITDA improvement together with some timing benefits from accounts payable.

Looking forward, while the long-term impact of COVID-19 remain highly uncertain, we are cautiously more optimistic about the upcoming Q2 and the remainder of the year. As a result, we now expect Q2 revenue to be $35.5 million to $36.5 million, representing year-over-year growth of 37% to 41%. Adjusted EBITDA for Q2 is expected to be negative $2.5 million to negative $1.5 million, representing negative 5.6% at midpoint. We are raising our full year revenue guidance to $145.5 million to $147.5 million or 36% to 38% year-over-year growth, up from prior guidance of $139 million to $141 million or 30% to 32% year-over-year growth. We are increasing full year EBITDA guidance to negative $9 million to negative $7 million, up from guidance of negative $15 million to negative $13 million.

In addition, we expect our timing to profitability to accelerate by approximately one year from what we expected. We now expect to reach EBITDA profitability in the second half of 2021. We expect that our strong cash position, together with strong top line growth and path to profitability allows us to continue to hire and make long-term investment in strategic initiatives, such as going upmarket, catalog expansion, international expansion and innovative product in order to support growth.

With that, I will now turn the call over to the operator for questions. Operator?

Questions and Answers:

Operator

Yes Thank you. We will now begin the question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] And the first question today comes from Doug Anmuth with JP Morgan.

Douglas Anmuth — JP Morgan — Analyst

Great. Thanks for taking the questions. I have two. First, just, Micha, if you can talk more about the six straight weeks of accelerating GMV, little more on your views on how you think COVID-19 is kind of changing the business and potentially what new opportunities does it open up for you beyond the crisis? And then, Ofer, you just talked about EBITDA profit kind of pulling forward roughly a year or so. Just hoping you could expand a little bit on what gives you the confidence on pulling that into the back half of ’21? Thanks.

Micha Kaufman — Co-Founder, Chief Executive Officer & Director

Good morning Doug. Thanks for the question. So as to the accelerating GMV, I think that in our update in April, we said that the volatility period has been very short for us. It was about 10 days. And afterwards, we didn’t just bounce back, but we — actually, resumed a pretty significant growth. The good news is, we’re seeing that growth across the board. We see that across all categories. We see that across all cohorts, new and old, and we see that across all geographies.

Now I think that, in some special way, although, the COVID-19 had some devastated effects, it also made the case for what Fiverr is preaching for 10 days — for 10 years. The ability to hire a workforce remotely, to engage remotely in a very efficient way has become something of an increased awareness. And I think that Fiverr is becoming more of a — in a sense, a critical tool for both businesses and freelancers. So the fact that we are seeing that growth coming very strong in April. In some verticals, we see that growth being nearly doubling the growth on a monthly basis. And we see that across all of our categories.

And we see that our new customers, those who joined Fiverr post the COVID-19, their behavior is very consistent with our older cohorts, in terms of their activity, the categories in which they purchase. And I think that, in a sense, Fiverr has enjoyed a massive awareness jump due to this situation and the fact that people were locked home and were forced to think about how to do things remotely. So, although, it’s very hard to predict what’s going to be in the future, I think that the resiliency of our cohorts, both new and old, reaffirm our assurance that Fiverr is indeed a critical go-to-market base for our needs.

Ofer Katz — Chief Financial Officer

And Doug, this is Ofer. The second part of the question was about the pull-forward of the profitability in one year and what gives us the confidence? I think that the confidence is based on what we’ve been seeing in Q1 followed by the last few weeks into Q2. I think the behavior of the cohort, old cohort together with new cohort, and our ability to scale the business in such a short time in terms of efficiency of sales and marketing, in terms of gross margin that goes high fast, and together with the update of the guidance, it’s actually accelerate our previous guidance and expectation, give us the confidence that we can reach to the point with the scalability of the business and the foundation of the business, which is based on existing core that keeps contributing more and more just — we are just going to meet this point of time earlier. So this is what we are based on.

Douglas Anmuth — JP Morgan — Analyst

Great. Thank you both.

Ofer Katz — Chief Financial Officer

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. And the next question comes from Nat Schindler with Bank of America.

Nathaniel Schindler — Bank of America Merrill Lynch — Analyst

Yes. Hi guys. Hey, is there any way — any characterization you can give me of the new buyers would use more of your traditional small company buyers looking for help on single things? Or have you done more to penetrate more large buyers given the environment. Also on the seller side, I know you said across all categories, but has there been any particular change on what has shown up on the platform that is new and interesting since the change in kind of stay-at-home orders?

Micha Kaufman — Co-Founder, Chief Executive Officer & Director

Hey, good morning Nat. And thanks for the questions. So to begin with, there is an increase in our high value buyers, which now represents 58% of our revenues. And what we’re seeing is we’re seeing that the behavior of all of these new buyers is very consistent with what we’ve seen. We have a combination of small businesses, medium businesses and larger businesses with maybe a little bit more skewed in recent cohorts towards the more larger. That said, the SMB continues to be very vibrant, and this is shown by the fact that our older cohorts, those who have been with us for even 10 years have been going back into growth. So we’re seeing this really across the board.

In terms of categories, I think that in April, we talked in our update, to the fact that there were — as we view it, four phases to this crisis. The first was the fact that I think there was a denial and most countries didn’t think that it was their problem. Then it turned into panic, where I think people were starting to focus home. Then there’s self preservation where people are home and figuring out what to do. And very fast from that, there’s adaptation. So when people started being at home, we’ve witnessed a few new types of interest that are more around online tutorials, taking courses, things that have to do with more of the stay-at-home. But that trend shifted very fast.

Now we reacted to it by launching 30 new categories and adapting very fast to it. And one of the benefits of being a horizontal marketplace is that we can react superfast to any trend that is within the market. But we saw that there were — in essence, the categories were all picking up, and there wasn’t any concentration around any specific category. And whatever trends — whatever new trends that we’re seeing, we’re reacting to. The one thing that is, I think, apparent or emphasized in this era, is the fact that a lot of businesses are realizing that they need to move a lot of their offline activity into the online. And there’s no better place to do that than on Fiverr. And this is why a lot of our initial campaigns is a reaction to the COVID-19 and a lot of our engagements with our community was to really help them do exactly that. So use the fact that this lockdown that was imposed to us would be used by businesses to move their activity to the online, and we’ve seen a lot of activity around that. But to my point, this was across the board.

Nathaniel Schindler — Bank of America Merrill Lynch — Analyst

And just on a separate question. We’ve heard a lot about the changing media dynamics as other companies have pulled back because of their — the negative impact this has had on their business. Are there — are you doing anything to really adjust your media spend? And are you seeing new areas that are opening up for you in order to increase engagement, particularly, we know that search will probably hold on in your categories for a little bit, but I could imagine that you have a lot of opportunity in brand and other offline ad campaigns.

Micha Kaufman — Co-Founder, Chief Executive Officer & Director

Yes. Thank you. So we’re definitely reacting to changes. So the first one is the fact that, as I’ve noted, there is a huge increase in awareness, which means that the organic portion of our marketing is growing very, very fast, and we can use that in the mix with our performance marketing. The changes or the trends that we’re seeing with the performance marketing is the fact that very large advertisers are pulled off from the market. As an example, the travel business or the hospitality business that have pulled off the market, creating a opportunity for an acquisition in a much lower prices. And obviously, we’re there to capture this opportunity and respond to it. And again, because we’re a horizontal marketplace, we’re able to diversify our marketing campaign, so that we pick the most optimized keywords, the most optimized categories at each and every point to ensure that we’re paying as little as possible and converting as high as possible. So we’ve seen those changes.

And I’ve made a note in my opening comment to the fact that we’ve been able to produce marketing campaigns using our own platform because we were imposed not to travel and not to work with any production companies. We’ve done everything on the platform. So a lot of the beautiful campaigns that we’ve been shipping during the first quarter and into the second quarter were performed and produced on the platform. And we’re not the only ones who are taking advantage of that. Our customers are taking advantage of that as well.

Nathaniel Schindler — Bank of America Merrill Lynch — Analyst

Great. Thank you. I’ll let you get on to the other guys.

Micha Kaufman — Co-Founder, Chief Executive Officer & Director

Okay. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. And the next question comes from Ron Josey with JMP Securities.

Ronald Josey — JMP Securities — Analyst

Great. Thanks for taking the question. And Micha, I really appreciate the increased guidance and insight here. Maybe changing track a little bit and talking about just newer products. On Promoted Gigs, you talked about five categories, and 80% adoption rate and retention rates. I’m wondering if you can talk about what you’re seeing early days on just the ROI of Promoted Gig to the sellers, the rollout plan for more categories? And Ofer, I think you mentioned in the letter, it wouldn’t have an impact this year. Wondering why not, I guess is the question? Thanks again.

Micha Kaufman — Co-Founder, Chief Executive Officer & Director

Thanks, Ron. And good morning. So Promoted Gigs was actually launched ahead of schedule, which we’re very happy with. And the original plan, as we discussed in previous earnings calls, was to gradually release that, test it, optimize it, and perfect it over time. So the idea was to start and, just again to emphasize, what’s really important about Promoted Gigs, is that, those ad placements are going to be relevant and are going to be high quality. So what we’ve done is we’ve launched with five categories with limited offering, with a limited group of sellers, to start testing a number of things. Relevancy and quality is obviously one of them. But then also to make sure that it is being very well accepted by our customers to see that the click-through and the conversion are very strong.

The ROI on Promoted Gigs is very high. And because of that, what we see is we see a nearly 100% retention among those sellers who started testing it, because of that strong ROI. So the adoption of this plant to those who we offered to participate in it was very high, was more than 80%, and the retention was close to 100%. And everything that we see from that is very high. The same goes for the buyers who are actually using it. This is demonstrated in the click-through and the conversion, but the levels of satisfactions are very high. So with that, the plan is to start scaling this product to more sellers, to more categories and to more areas of the product. We just started the test with the subcategory pages. We’re going to extend it to our search and to other areas of the site. So this is going to be gradually throughout the year.

And I think we made a note that from the experience of other companies that have done it and we’ve been in touch with, we know that it could take up to 12 months to optimize this product. And I think that because of that, we’ve taken the cautious measure of not factoring any wishful thinking into it. And this is why this is — when we think about guidance, this is not a part of it because, again, it’s a new product. The pace of adoption, the pace of scale may differ depending on the progress. And this is why we didn’t want to factor this into our guidance.

Ronald Josey — JMP Securities — Analyst

Got it. Thank you Micha.

Micha Kaufman — Co-Founder, Chief Executive Officer & Director

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. And the next question comes from Brad Erickson with Needham & Company.

Bradley Erickson — Needham & Company — Analyst

Hi, guys. Thanks. First one, and this may have already been asked, maybe in some ways, I jumped on a little late, so I apologize. But I guess, just when we think about the real GMV composition of these categories where you saw activity increase as a function of work-from-home and stay-at-home, and I know you called some of them out, gaming, I guess, social media, online lessons and I think it was ebooks. So when we think about those categories that are especially stronger lately, what portion of those situations from a business planning assumption standpoint, where do you think we’ve fundamentally changed online from offline permanently versus maybe some of the effects are a bit more temporary? I know it’s a really hard question to answer, but just wonder if you could help investors understand that, what kind of — what your gut tells you there given how broad-based the categories you address are? And then I have a follow-up. Thanks.

Micha Kaufman — Co-Founder, Chief Executive Officer & Director

Thanks, Brad, and good morning. So essentially, I’ve made the note that a lot of businesses are taking this opportunity to move from offline to online. I don’t think that this is going away. I don’t think that this is changing. I think that the awareness to the importance of doing business online is not going to fade away. That said, if I relate to some of the categories that we mentioned and you repeated in your questions, like gaming, social media, ebooks and so forth, what we’re seeing in these categories is that even if you have customers that have joined through gaming, these customers continue to buy with us across many other categories.

So essentially, we don’t think because of the cohorts, at least from what we’re seeing right now, and again, I want to put the caveat that nobody really knows how — where this is going to develop into. But what we’re seeing in the five weeks since the outbreak or the rebound from volatility is we’re seeing a consistent cohort behavior that is not limited or not concentrated into specific categories. These new cohorts behave very similar to our older cohorts, and all of them are growing, all of them, including very old cohorts. They didn’t just rebound to their activity but are spending more and being more active on the marketplace. So while it’s — to your point, it’s very, very hard to forecast what’s going to happen and nobody can actually do that, what we’re seeing from our data right now is very consistent and a very resilient activity of our customers across all cohorts, including new ones.

Ofer Katz — Chief Financial Officer

I would like to augment and say that we have the capacity to monitor in fact, behavior, not only on category level but also geography, which gives us a huge advantage as we speak, to see how different countries and different audience in countries that goes through this pandemic in different time zone are reacting, whether they work-from-home, how does it imply into number of orders, the categories behavior and on. So what I can share is that while some countries were pretty much blocked in terms of working only from home, if any, and some of them already released, we see and experience a continued strong activity, despite the fact that people are working back from the office and are going to normal course of running the business. So this is why we don’t think it’s necessarily a temporary raise driven only by the pandemic.

Bradley Erickson — Needham & Company — Analyst

That’s super helpful color. Thanks. And then maybe just a follow-up for Ofer. Just related to the raised revenue guidance for the year. Is there any contribution of that from the Spain and France rollout? It sounds like it’s going a little bit better than expected. Or is it just more a function of just the broadly stronger activity you were talking about with everyone being at home right now? Thanks.

Ofer Katz — Chief Financial Officer

So obviously, France and Spain and Germany are super performing, and part of the raise of guidance is related to the successful launch. And I think that you’ve probably went through the document that we shared earlier today. We released the machine-learning translation that actually — already give us a good signal about the usage. So together with emerging traffic, better conversion, I think we are starting — or continuing to see the majority — the maturity of the investment in geography expansion in different languages.

Bradley Erickson — Needham & Company — Analyst

That’s great. Thanks.

Micha Kaufman — Co-Founder, Chief Executive Officer & Director

Operator?

Operator

Yes. The next question comes from Jason Helfstein with Oppenheimer.

Jason Helfstein — Oppenheimer — Analyst

Hey guys, thanks. I’ll ask two. I don’t think were answered — asked yet, but I apologize if they were. Any update on traction you’re seeing in Fiverr Studios? And then kind of just how you’re thinking about that for the rest of the year? And then it seems that you are going to lead into marketing in second quarter and beyond because marketing is more efficient now given what’s happening in the market and how well you’re able to actually convert new traffic. Just how should we be thinking about kind of marketing for the rest — the cadence for the rest of the year and then perhaps domestically versus international? Thanks.

Micha Kaufman — Co-Founder, Chief Executive Officer & Director

Hey, Jason, good morning and thank you for the questions. So as for Fiverr Studios, Fiverr Studios is growing very nicely. And actually, it is just the beginning of what we’re planning around this area. With the great signals that we’ve seen from Fiverr Studios, we are planning right now to extend that product and actually grow it into something more extensive that will not just allow sellers from Fiverr to team up into virtual studios but will allow existing agencies to join the platform and use it as an agency. So again, early days in that product, but we have great plans for it. It is growing. It is doing well, but we think that this is just the beginning of a larger offering that we have around that.

Ofer Katz — Chief Financial Officer

And Jason, this is Ofer. On the second part of the question about marketing. So historically, usually, the investment in marketing is ramping up in Q1, and that has been done, approximately 20% comparing last year. But then historically, it used to be stable throughout the year. I think we are taking advantage of the circumstances and the fact that lots of opportunity for us to scale. And you should expect that investment in marketing in Q2 and beyond is going to be bigger than Q1. So we are playing very opportunistic, being aggressive as unit economy framework allows us and a bit of space for us to invest more, and we’re doing that.

Jason Helfstein — Oppenheimer — Analyst

Okay. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. And the next question comes from Eric Sheridan with UBS.

Eric Sheridan — UBS — Analyst

Thanks for taking the question. Two, if I can. One, in terms of the behavior you’re seeing on the platform, any updated view on what that might mean longer term for take rates in the business, especially maybe even driven by the adoption of value-added services by the demand side you’re seeing in the current environment? And then, Ofer, with pulling the profitability forward into ’21, curious if that also has an update for your long-term margin thoughts? Thanks so much guys.

Ofer Katz — Chief Financial Officer

So Eric, on the take rate, we have been demonstrating over the past few quarters, our ability to increase take rate moderately. And we plan to continue to do that by providing more value-added services. And I think Micha spoke about Promoted Gigs earlier. This is one type of additional services on the seller side that can contribute to take rates. So we feel very comfortable with the take rate that it is. I would take the advantage of this timing to share that we don’t feel any pushback neither on the buyer or on the seller on pricing and take rate. We feel very convenient and confident with the existing structure of take rate. We haven’t made any changes. We don’t plan to make any change on the fundamental take rate, which is transaction related. So that any additional take rate that you will see in the future is tied up and directly related with additional services, and we have a few of them in the pipeline. So I think this is on the take rate.

In terms of long-term margins, it hasn’t been changed. It’s 25% as we’ve said before, and we are heading there. It’s just a matter of scale of the business. I think the efficiency is embedded to everything we do, all the way from gross margin to R&D, Fiverr marketing and G&A. I think we have been able to demonstrate how we do that during the last four quarters since we went public, and we’re confident we can keep delivering the same rationale in the future.

Eric Sheridan — UBS — Analyst

Thanks so much.

Operator

Thank you. And the final question today comes from Drew Kootman with Cantor Fitzgerald.

Drew Kootman — Cantor Fitzgerald — Analyst

HI. Thanks for taking my question. Just one from me. I wanted to touch on annual guidance. You guys are one of the few companies that’s continued to give annual guidance, which is great. So just curious, what kind of economic conditions you’re assuming in guidance? And any thoughts on how your revenue growth reacts if the economy is faster or slower to recover?

Ofer Katz — Chief Financial Officer

So this is Ofer. And I think that we have been tracking the behavior of cohort in the marketplace on a daily basis since inception, including the last few weeks, where we track it even more intensively. We actually open a data hub phone. All hands with many people around the company participate in a daily update on behavior across all dimensions that you could imagine on territory and categories and cohort and many other KPIs that we measure here in the company. So when we look forward, we always said that we guide based on what we know, and we feel confident based on existing cohort, not only new cohorts, that even in a scenario of — that the COVID-19 pandemic uncertain circumstances, we feel confident that there are some circumstances for us to benefit. So there are some positive and negative impact of the continued uncertainty. But from what we’ve seen recently, we have the confidence to upgrade our guidance for the remainder of the year.

Drew Kootman — Cantor Fitzgerald — Analyst

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. And that does conclude the question session. I would like to return the call to the speakers for any closing comments.

Micha Kaufman — Co-Founder, Chief Executive Officer & Director

Yes. I just wanted to thank everyone to — that participated in the call today and wish everyone a great day and continue to stay safe guys. That’s the most important thing. Thank you.

Operator

[Operator Closing Remarks]

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