Palo Alto Networks (TICKER: PANW) Palo Alto Networks Inc Panw Q2 2024 Earnings Call Transcript
Palo Alto Networks, Inc. (NASDAQ:PANW) Q2 2024 Earnings Conference Call
February 20, 2024 4:30 PM ET
Company Participants
Walter Pritchard - Senior Vice President, Investor Relations
Nikesh Arora - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Dipak Golechha - Chief Financial Officer
Conference Call Participants
Hamza Fodderwala - Morgan Stanley
Brian Essex - JPMorgan
Andrew Nowinski - Wells Fargo
Saket Kalia - Barclays
Gabriela Borges - Goldman Sachs
Fatima Boolani - Citi
Roger Boyd - UBS
Jonathan Ho - William Blair
Keith Bachman - BMO Capital Markets
Adam Borg - Stifel
Tal Liani - BofA Securities
Brad Zelnick - Deutsche Bank
Matt Hedberg - RBC Capital Markets
Joseph Gallo - Jefferies
Walter Pritchard
Good day, everyone, and welcome to Palo Alto Networks' Fiscal Second
Quarter 2024 Earnings Conference Call. I am Walter Pritchard, Senior
Vice President of Investor Relations and Corporate Development. Please
note that this call is being recorded today, Tuesday, February 20th,
2024 at 1:30 P.M. Pacific Time.
With me on today's call to discuss second quarter results are Nikesh
Arora, our Chairman and Chief Executive Officer; and Dipak Golechha,
our Chief Financial Officer.
Following our prepared remarks, Lee Klarich, our Chief Product Officer,
will join us for the question-and-answer portion. You can find the
press release and other information to supplement today's discussion on
our website at investors.paloaltonetworks.com. While there, please
click on the link for quarterly results to find the Q2 '24 supplemental
information and the Q2 '24 earnings presentation.
During the course of today's call, we will make forward-looking
statements and projections regarding the company's business operations
and financial performance. These statements made today are subject to a
number of risks and uncertainties that could cause our actual results
to differ from those forward-looking statements.
Please review our press release and recent SEC filings for a
description of these risks and uncertainties. We assume no obligation
to update any forward-looking statements made in the presentations
today.
We will also refer to non-GAAP financial measures. These measures
should not be considered as substitute for financial measures prepared
in accordance with GAAP. The most directly comparable GAAP financial
metrics and reconciliations are in the press release and the appendix
of the investor presentation.
Unless specifically noted otherwise, all results and comparisons are on
a fiscal year-over-year basis. We would also like to note that
management is scheduled to participate in the Morgan Stanley TMT
Conference in March.
I will now turn the call over to Nikesh.
Nikesh Arora
Thank you, Walter. Good afternoon and thank you for joining us today
for our earnings call. I am pleased to report another quarter in which
we successfully executed our profitable growth strategy, driving a
combination of top-line growth, significant expansion in non-GAAP
operating margin, and strong free cash flow generation.
Revenues grew 19% year-to-year and RPO grew 22%, capturing the full
value of our future revenue. Billings grew 16% year-to-year. Just as
important as we focus on profitable growth, we again delivered
substantial operating margin leverage and strong growth in free cash
flow.
Non-GAAP operating margins of 28.6% expanded nearly 600 basis points
year-over-year and we generated $2.9 billion in adjusted free cash flow
on a trailing 12-month basis. Our strong profitability drove non-GAAP
EPS of $1.46 up 39% year-over-year, and our GAAP net income continued
to grow meaningfully even without one-time items.
Beyond our financial results, we achieved a number of notable
milestones in Q2, worthy of spotlighting. We continued to drive large
deals, including a steady stream of million dollar plus deals and
success in our largest deals with 10 transactions that were $20 million
in the quarter.
Our 10 highest spending customers in Q2 increased their spend with us
by 36% of the period. I also wanted to update you on key achievements
across our three platforms. In our network security business, we
continue to see progress driving ARR growth in our SASE business. Q2
was our fifth consecutive quarter of 50% ARR growth.
Additionally, more than 30% of our new SASE customers we signed in the
second quarter were new to Palo Alto Networks, showing that we can win
head-to-head in the market when leading with SASE.
We continue to drive innovation in network security, refreshing our
high-end 7500 series platform, and investing new OT security
capabilities, which garnered a net new leadership position for us.
In Prisma Cloud, we have made significant investments in the first half
of the year to drive new customers and saw this pay off in Q2 with our
highest new ACV growth in five quarters. We continue to see strong
trends in multi-module adoption, with approximately 30% growth in
customers with two or more modules and approximately 60% growth in
customers with three or more modules.
Additionally, about a quarter of our customers are using five or more
modules. Our external recognition in this market continued with
Forrester Research positioning us as a leader in this Cloud Workload
Security Wave Report.
In Cortex, XSIAM continues to be a significant catalyst for large
transactions and growth across the business. This is evidenced by ARR,
for XSIAM customers being more than five times higher than that of
Cortex customers who have not yet adopted XSIAM.
We have seen significant progress in the milestone with XSIAM in Q2,
including the most number of deals signed in a single quarter and
bookings of over $90 million again this quarter.
We've already displaced 19 different SIM vendors to date, and with the
confidence under our belt, we're now looking systematically on how we
can accelerate this legacy SIM displacement. From a regional
perspective, demand overall is healthy.
We did see softness in the US federal government's market. We were
positioned well for several large projects where we had requisite
certifications and one technical selection, but these deals did not
close.
The situation started off towards the end of Q1. We were worsened in
Q2, and as a result, we had a significant shortfall in our US Federal
government business. We expect this trend will continue into our Q3 and
Q4. Offsetting the billing weakness in Fed was some non-product backlog
that we shipped this quarter.
With several leadership positions awarded in second quarter, including
our addition as a leader of the Gartner Endpoint Protection Magic
Quadrant, we're now a recognized leader in 21 different categories
across our three platforms.
Five years ago when we began our strategy, the industry believed
building leadership across multiple categories wasn't possible. No one
was talking about security platform. Instead, the word was
best-of-breed. Our success over the last five years has been driven by
the shift to platformization. We're committed to investing in
innovation to extend our industry leadership position and platform.
This unique leadership across our three markets is driving strong
adoption of our platforms in our target Global 2000 markets. As of Q2,
79% of Global 2000 have transacted with us on at least two of our
platforms and 57% on all three.
This is up from 73% and 47% two years ago. In most of these accounts,
while they have adopted products from multiple platforms, we are early
in driving each of our platforms wall-to-wall. This is a major area of
focus for us as we move forward, driving consolidation within our three
platforms.
We know this is the right strategy as we see compelling economics with
multi-platform wins. Our two platform customers have an average
customer lifetime value that is more than five times that of our single
platform customer.
For our three platform customers, that is more than 40 times larger.
While we are driving platformization, I personally think we should be
doing this faster. Not only is this showing up in our deal statistics,
but as we have established the position of our platforms, we are now
seeing significant progress in consolidating vendors in our customer
environments.
We have built our zero trust platforms through a consistent
architecture across our appliance, software, and SASE form factors.
Customers can now consistently manage security policy across these form
factors, and then leverage a consistent set of security subscriptions
to consolidate network security capabilities.
These capabilities, provided by point vendors can include intrusion
prevention, web proxies, URL filtering, SD-WAN, and DLP, just to name a
few. In Q2, we saw zero trust consolidation wins that included a large
US manufacturing company standardizing on our network security platform
in a $40 million transaction, replacing end-of-life competitive
hardware, leveraging our security subscription, and removing a point
competitor in SSE.
We were the only company with the right certifications across all these
offerings that could support their broad geographic footprint. This
deal was part of the consolidation and modernization effort across IT
with positive ROI for the customer.
We also had a seven figure deal with a large law firm expanding our
firewall footprint in the new data center and expanding their hybrid
workforce initiatives with Prisma Access. As part of this, we won
versus other firewall and SSE competitors and also consolidated their
URL filtering and VPN capabilities.
In Prisma Cloud, we have built a core-to-cloud platform combining key
best-of-breed capabilities that we have acquired or developed
organically. Our common architecture and user experience spreads across
12 modules.
As our customers adopt multiple modules, they can consolidate a wide
variety of vendors, including those in cloud security posture
management, cloud workload protection, API security, SCA or software
composition analysis, and infrastructure as code security amongst
others.
In Q2, we closed a seven-figure Prisma Cloud new logo deal with a
financial services company displacing multiple incumbent vendors. The
customer was looking for a CNAPP solution to support their multi-cloud
journey. The Prisma Cloud CNAPP streamlined several previously deployed
point solutions and tools.
They also closed a seven figure renew and expand deal with the leading
North American technology company where the customer intends to expand
the use of Prisma Cloud to seven modules and also value the
consolidation and standardization delivered through Prisma Cloud.
Finally, in our Cortex platform with our autonomous security operations
platform, XSIAM, we were able to establish our offering, which has
enabled us to accelerate a platform value proposition with Cortex.
A platform approach in the SOC is becoming a customer imperative, as
point products, each with their own data stores, cannot have full
context nor drive appropriate action without overly complex
integrations and high people costs.
In Q2, we saw consolidation wins that include a large insurance company
that renewed its subscriptions, support and firewalls at the same time,
added XSIAM and Expanse capability for a $25 million transaction.
The XSIAM choice displays the two leading EDR and SIM competitors in
the market, and enables the customer to avoid the cost of adding other
point products in their SOC. Additionally, in Q2, we saw follow-on
consolidation success for the Japanese manufacturing company that
previously consolidated their network security across our SASE
capabilities, leveraging Prisma Access and our DLP and CASB
capabilities.
The customer then added XSOAR into their SOC and expressed an interest
in consolidating further. In Q2, they added XSIAM in a mid-seven figure
deal. I know all of you had a chance to look at our guidance. Our
guidance is not a consequence of a change in the demand outlook out
there.
Our guidance is a consequence of us driving a shift in our strategy in
wanting to accelerate both our platformization and consolidation and
activating our AI leadership. We believe this is the time for us to
invest, given our leadership position in the market and our leadership
position across platformization and consolidation.
But before I talk about that more as to how we intend to accelerate our
growth prospects in the future and drive towards a much higher
aspiration of $15 billion in ARR by 2030, I want to give you a candid
view of where we see the cybersecurity market and the demand function
out there.
The demand story is no different from prior quarters and on the margin,
continues to get stronger. There are multiple drivers fueling this. The
threat landscape continues to challenge our customers with increasing
scale and sophistication of attacks.
I'm personally getting calls from CEOs and members of boards that have
had bad incidents, as well as those that have seen their peers
adversely impacted. We're increasingly focusing on working with
companies impacted by breaches, an important commitment as we continue
to be the leader in this space.
Last quarter, we offered 1,500 of our top customers an opportunity to
get our free support during a breach. Surprisingly, 400 customers have
signed up in the last 90 days out of 1,500 to get our help on this
topic.
Clearly there is awareness and concern around cybersecurity, as has
never been before. Heightened geopolitical tensions are driving
significant national state activity with national infrastructure being
targeted.
Successful breaches and ransomware attacks are being perpetrated across
many industries with few repercussions for the bad actors. Although we
did see various law enforcement agencies this morning over the weekend
shut down lock pit, which is a promising sign.
The new SEC mandate requires prompt disclosure of material incidents
which often result in companies reporting those incidents before a full
assessment can be done or incidents to mediate it. We see some
companies making several disclosures in succession as they grapple with
understanding the full extent of what they are facing.
We see the results of these disclosure mandates recognizing the need
for expedited action in security, visibility, and remediation in
[indiscernible]. The part that is new, despite the many demand drivers
we're seeing, we're beginning to notice customers are facing spending
fatigue in cybersecurity.
This is new, as adding incremental point products is not necessarily
driving a better security outcome for them. This is driving a greater
focus on ROI and total cost of ownership amongst most customers.
There are also some key trends within the industry that I think are
worth highlighting. Palo Alto Networks is unique in seeing gains in
market share in hardware firewalls or in the product space.
This market is changing rapidly with us seeing some of our competitors
who had introduced price increases begin to roll them back. From our
vantage point, we see the share shift happening in our favor because we
see customers consolidating into our zero trust platforms.
Customers, as I mentioned, 30%, net new network security customers or
SASE or new to Palo Alto. Those are the customers who over time go
ahead and consolidate their footprint and require our firewalls to be
deployed to give them a consistent zero trust architecture. We see this
as a promising trend.
We intend to accelerate that opportunity. Along with the incremental
focus on ROI and TCO with single product vendors having challenges and
articulating compelling value, they're also forced to have
platformization narrative.
When they're not able to convince the customers that their strategy is
competitive, they're many times resorting to un-economic pricing and
putting pressure on transactions in this manner.
We're beginning to see rogue behavior by some vendors in the space who
are keen to retain their customers, primarily in the legacy vendor
space and the start-up space. We intend to combat that with investing
in this space and trying to accelerate platformization and
consolidation for our customers.
We're also seeing increased demand for AI, along with deploying AI in
our products or big needs to our customers asking us to help them
protect for a successful and responsible deployment of AI in their
infrastructure.
Putting this all together, these trends of the market bolster our
conviction that adopting platforms is the only viable strategy for
customers and leveraging AI is imperative. We want to march faster to
our aspiration to become the sales force, to become the service now, or
the workday of cybersecurity.
Customers have adopted platforms in other markets across technology,
and this will inevitably happen in cybersecurity. These industry trends
set up conditions that favor leaders that can drive consolidation.
We intend to answer this challenge. With all the problems that
platformization holds, adoption is not always easy for many of our
customers. Until now, we have primarily assumed that our customers
adopt our platforms at their own pace.
The crux of the challenge is around execution. Customers face risk in
executing or making significant changes to the environments as well as
economic exposure from these changes. Key friction points you've
noticed include the challenge of replacing multiple products
simultaneously as well as the issues around double playing while
working through complex contract terms.
Over the last six months, we have been quietly working to develop
programs that enable us to help minimize and even share in the risk of
our customers' face. You will see us tomorrow launching a significant
number of platform offers to our customers to help drive the
consolidation and platformization strategy.
We believe we can build customer confidence in our platforms by
approaching them well before their point product contracts expire.
After we gain their contractual commitment, we have offered an extended
rollout period where we can demonstrate our ability to deliver these
platform benefits.
Customers can then start paying us after the obligation of legacy
vendors ends. With the experience we've gained over the last six
months, we believe now is the right time to accelerate programs across
our portfolio to drive this platformization.
All these programs will have mechanisms to reduce customer friction,
accelerate product deployment, help customer realize the value of our
platforms, and consume new innovation sooner.
While this is not an exhaustive list, I wanted to give you some
examples. We have begun to launch programs already that include legacy
trade-ins, no-cost introductory offers and product add-ons and
incentives to accelerate estate standardization.
Each of these programs is elements of reducing execution risk and
dealing with economic exposure that concern our customers. In that
sense, we must bear the cost of the transition through lower upfront
financial outcomes, but we are convinced these will yield amazing
outcomes for us in the mid to long-term.
We have developed these programs across all three platforms, and as I
mentioned, we intend, we have announced a few and we intend to announce
more starting tomorrow in addition to expanding some of the programs
that we already have.
Given this is an investor call and you're all focused on these numbers,
I want to provide you a high level understanding of the aggregate
impact we expect this will have in the medium term and long term. I
will then have Deepak talk more about this in his section and explain
this much more eloquently and elaborately.
We expect a typical customer entering into a platformization
transaction will not pay us for our technology for a period of time. As
these programs ramp over the next year, we expect a change to our
billings and revenue growth for the next 12 to 18 months.
As customers move into the period where contracts have a full billing
and revenue contribution, we expect to see an acceleration in our top
line metrics. Beyond this dip and acceleration in our top line metrics,
we believe we can sustain higher growth rates for longer, driven by
sticky and broad platform relationships with incremental customers,
allowing us to aspire to a goal of $15 billion in next generation
security in 2030.
We also expect to achieve our transformation to a business with greater
than 90% recurring revenue, an industry leading non-GAAP operating
margins in the low to mid 30s. As Deepak will explain, we believe we
can do this in a financially prudent and strong manner.
Talking about bigger platforms and ARR, aspirations cannot be done
today without talking about AI. We have been working on AI for a long
time as a company, however, we did accelerate our efforts with the
arrival of generative AI.
I personally believe AI is going to be one of the biggest inflection
points in technology in over a decade and likely, more importantly, to
significantly increase the total addressable market in cybersecurity.
Gartner predicts by 2027 $300 billion will be spent on AI software.
This AI juggernaut continues to bring several challenges along with it
from a security perspective, multiple vectors of attacks ranging from
phishing to malware to nation state activity and inflected negatively
due to AI.
Furthermore, customers are evaluating dozens of co-pilot type offerings
with end users where security is not necessarily front and center. We
see three discrete opportunities to drive additional growth in
cybersecurity through AI and we have internally put pen to paper to
understand this opportunity, and we're in alpha or beta stages of many
of these across our product capabilities.
First, organizations are concerned about their employees' access to AI
in an insecure manner, where the consequences are unintended leakage
over from source, other data models tampering, or AI-driven phishing,
we see an opportunity to add value across the growing volume of users
we secure.
We currently secure north of 100 million users and their access to
applications both in the public cloud and in the data center. We expect
each of these users is an opportunity for us to deliver an AI security
sub for them. It leaves us a $3 to $5 billion opportunity over the next
five years.
Secondly, organizations are increasingly deploying AI-related workloads
in the cloud, just like they need to understand the overall security
posture of the cloud estate and expeditiously identify immediate
issues.
They must do this for AI-related workloads. We believe this in itself
is a $5 billion to $6 billion opportunity in the next five years.
Lastly, network traffic will increasingly have an AI context with
interactions and transactions between applications and AI models.
Our more than half a million installed firewalls is the perfect place
to inspect this traffic. We believe this is the $5 billion to $6
billion opportunity in the next five years. Overall, this combined $13
billion to $17 billion opportunity drives our conviction that investing
in AI and maintaining our leadership can help us accelerate our growth
towards $15 billion by 2030.
The larger opportunity, we also believe we are uniquely positioned to
garner our fair share of the stamp. Our proprietary data and large
technology footprint is a significant advantage in driving AI outcomes.
We've already seen the early benefits of this AI in our newly developed
product offerings.
In Q2, our AI offerings, which include XSIAM, Autonomous Digital
Experience Management, or ADEM, and AIOps, cost the $100 million in ARR
milestone. We are possibly the first security companies to cost $100
million ARR in AI security.
This is above and beyond the AI capabilities we have embedded across
all of our platforms, including our advanced subscriptions and our core
to cloud platforms. Our co-pilots are in alpha, are in the hands of
leading customers who are giving us feedback before we move to general
availability.
Looking forward, we have aggressive plans to roll out additional
AI-based offerings by the end of this fiscal year. We have plans to
offer three new product offerings, one to address each of the stamps I
talked about.
Before I wrap up and pass it on to Deepak, I'd like to summarize. We
have established our platformization notion, our clear industry
leadership position with our best-of-breed platforms, and the industry
trends convince us we're in the best position to capitalize on this
early trend and now focus on the next phase of cybersecurity, which is
going to be all about consolidation.
One of the hardest things to do is to change a strategy that is
working. We have spent time understanding how to accelerate our
strategy further. We firmly believe as a management team that the
changes we are making today are going to give us better prospects in
the mid to long-term and allow us to drive this consolidation much
faster whilst giving our customers better ROI and total cost of
ownership.
AI is an opportunity in the early stages. However, we are seeing the
signs that there is significant demand there. It will prove to be an
inflection point for cybersecurity. And today will be marked as a day
where we will see that inflection begin to take hold as we start to
deliver more AI security products over the course of the rest of the
year.
We have confidence we can drive our top line growth trajectory higher
for longer ahead of the growth trajectory we talked about back in
August, despite absorbing some short-term impacts.
We have shown we run the business in a financially prudent manner,
which we will continue to do as we dive this exploration, hitting our
original operating profitability and cash flow margin targets.
With that, I will pass on to Deepak.
Dipak Golechha
Thank you, Nikesh, and good afternoon, everyone.
Given all that we have to talk about this quarter, I will do an
abbreviated review of our Q2 results. You can refer to the press
release and supplemental financial information on our website for our
key numbers.
For Q2, revenue of $1.98 billion grew 19%. Product revenue grew 11%,
while total service revenue grew 22%, with subscription revenue growing
26%, and support revenue growing 14%.
Moving on to geographies, we saw consistent revenue growth across all
of our theaters, with the Americas growing 19%, EMEA up 19%, and JPAC
also growing 19%. We had some puts and takes during the quarter related
to billings.
As Nikesh mentioned, we saw weakness in the US federal vertical related
to some specific programs. This US federal weakness was a meaningful
headwind to our billings in Q2 after we saw a slow start in the year to
Fed.
The impact of these federal deals on our revenue is significant as they
are relatively shorter than our average contract term. At the same
time, we saw a decrease in our non-product backlog which offset this
Fed weakness in our billings.
We continued to see customers closely watching cash outlays around
deals, which we discussed last quarter, although this trend played out
largely as we expected 90 days ago. Remaining performance obligation,
or RPO, was $10.8 billion, and current RPO was $5.2 billion. You likely
noticed that our GAAP EPS was $4.89 and GAAP net income was $1.75
billion.
These benefited from a $1.5 billion release of a tax-related valuation
allowance. This was a one-time item in fiscal year '24, which has been
adjusted out of our non-GAAP results. This amount also does not impact
our cash taxes.
Our average duration on new contracts was relatively flat
year-over-year, with average duration for new contracts remaining at
approximately three years, while total contract duration was down
slightly year-over-year.
I did want to spend more time talking about our accelerated
platformization and consolidation strategy and give you more of my
perspective with some additional framing and detail with a financial
lens.
Nikesh talked about our programs to alleviate friction with customers.
We believe that by moving from a deal-by-deal approach to a
program-based and systematic approach, we can accelerate
platformization with a customer base and drive vendor consolidation
faster by mitigating platformization friction.
This results in a number of business benefits for us, ranging from a
faster capture of the customer estate and larger platform commitment to
higher renewal and expansion rates and faster adoption of our new
innovations.
For the customer they are able to execute on the platform deployment
with lower risk and consolidate vendors while benefiting from a lower
cost total cost of ownership and a better security posture.
As Nikesh gave you the high-level trajectory on our pipeline, I wanted
to help you understand how we think about the medium term. Our
platformization offers to drive consolidation, effectively provide
customers a period of the contract for free as part of their
commitment.
We expect we may see a period of 12 to 18 months of pressure on our top
line growth rates, notably billings. Some of our platformization
programs embed deferred payments into deal structures, which we have
spoken about in the past.
We expect this will persist through fiscal year 2025 as we anniversary
the rollout of these programs and result in billings below the target
we provided in August of 2023. Beyond this period, we expect we can
sustain higher growth than we provided in these targets in August.
From an NGS ARR perspective, we expect less impact on our year-end
metrics, and we expect we can continue to meet or exceed our target,
which called for 30% growth rate through fiscal year '26.
As Nikesh noted, we are establishing a long-term target of $15 billion
of NGS ARR in fiscal year '30. Underlying this trend, we expect
customers deploying our full set of platforms to have a higher makeup
of NGS products. These offerings tend to be deeply installed in our
customer infrastructure.
And once a customer deploys the platform, it's easier to continue to
consolidate vendors and adopt new innovations. We expect this to drive
a significant increase in our overall revenue mix that is recurring.
From a revenue perspective, we expect to see less pressure on revenue
as compared to billings. Generally we see a lag in changes in our
revenue growth versus our billings growth, and we expect that this will
happen here as well.
As Nikesh mentioned, part of what gives us confidence to execute on the
strategy, and especially to do so now, is our success in driving
profitable growth. As we embark on a strategy that we expect will
negatively impact the top line in the short-term, we have significant
confidence that our business scales well and we can continue to see
operating leverage from a number of drivers.
As I have mentioned multiple times before, we scale well across every
line item of our P&L, ranging from customer support to cloud hosting,
to sales and marketing, to G&A. And we've seen significant payoff from
focusing on internal efficiency across all areas of the business.
Let me give you some specific examples for Q2. First, in cloud hosting,
we signed a significant extension with our primary cloud provider. This
contract is constructed to enable us to drive further margin benefits
as we scale.
Second, within G&A, we're progressing well on a significant employee
experience program. This started by analyzing all of our service desk
tickets across all channels and identifying all the manual responses
needed to address requests.
The combination of process re-engineering, automation, and AI is still
in progress, but we have already seen positive savings and have a
target of automating 90% of the more than 300,000 manual interventions.
By the end of Q2, we have roughly halved the cost of our T&E servicing.
We are now leveraging this program as a template across other business
areas. In short, whilst we made a lot of progress, we still have
significant opportunities on the profitability front.
That gives us confidence that we can maintain our medium term operating
margin and free cash margin targets beyond this year. Specifically, we
believe that we can expand our operating margins by 100 basis points
beyond this year, in line with the operating margin guidance we gave in
August of 28% to 29%. And this can continue to support our medium-term
free cash flow margin target of 37% plus.
We expect that this will come despite us absorbing some billing's
impact, as we have both the benefit of some prior arrangements with
deferred payments contributing as well as efforts we have placed on
optimizing the cash dynamics of our vendor spending.
In short, I wanted to reiterate what Nikesh said, that it is important
for us to be able to manage through this platformization acceleration
in a financially prudent manner and we have set ourselves up well to do
this over the next 12 to 18 months.
Now moving on to the guidance for Q3 and the year. For the third
quarter of 2024, we expect billings to be in the range of $2.30 billion
to $2.35 billion, an increase of 2% to 4%. We expect revenue to be in
the range of $1.95 billion to $1.98 billion, an increase of 13% to 15%.
We expect non-GAAP EPS to be in the range of $1.24 to $1.26, an
increase of 13% to 15%. For the fiscal year, we expect billings to be
in the range of $10.10 billion to $10.20 billion, an increase of 10% to
11%.
We expect NGS ARR to be in the range of $3.95 billion to $4 billion, an
increase of 34% to 35%. We expect revenue to be in the range of $7.95
billion to $8 billion, an increase of 15% to 16%.
We expect operating margins to be in the range of 26.5% to 27%, an
increase of 240 basis points to 290 basis points year-over-year. And we
expect non-GAAP EPS to be in the range of 5.45% to 5.55%, an increase
of 23% to 25%.
We expect adjusted pre-cash flow margin to be 38% to 39%. In the
interest of time and to get as many of your questions as possible,
we've included the modeling points in the appendix of our earnings
presentation.
With that, I will turn the call back over to Walter for the Q&A portion
of the call.
Question-and-Answer Session
A - Walter Pritchard
Thanks. We'll now proceed with Q&A. Please, in the interest of time,
ask only one question with no follow-ups. Our first question will come
from Hamza Fodderwala from Morgan Stanley, followed by Brian Essex from
JPMorgan. Hamza, please go ahead with your question.
Hamza Fodderwala
Good afternoon. Thanks for taking my question. I just wanted to
clarify, Nikesh, your comment on spending fatigue. What exactly were
you referring to there, just given you also said demand was quite good.
And then just the billings cut. It seems like it's a function of some
bundling, discounting, as well as lower duration. Anyway to quantify
that at all? Thank you.
Nikesh Arora
Thanks, Hamza. Thanks for the question. Yeah, I think I want to make
sure there's no confusion in our characterization of spending fatigue.
Over the last few years, most of our customers have ended up spending
more on cybersecurity than on IT. As a consequence, they're feeling
like my budget for cybersecurity keeps going up in double-digits every
year because I'm trying to protect against every new threat vector.
Yet, you see the number of breaches continues to rise. So our customer
are sitting down and saying, if I spend more money, can you show me how
I get a lower total cost of ownership across my enterprise? How do I
spend less on the services that I have to deploy? And how do I get
better ROI? So I think it's more about optimizing their current
cybersecurity budgets as opposed to there being no demand. Demand
continues to be very strong. The customers are demanding to get more
for the amount of money they have allocated to cybersecurity. That's
where platformization consolidation kicks in. In terms of trying to
quantify duration versus.
Dipak Golechha
So just to be clear, Hamza, from a billings perspective, part of the
billings guidance is related to the Fed that we talked about in the
prepared remarks, part of it is also because of the platform
initiatives -- platformization initiatives per se, but also part of it
is we just expect there to be more deferred payments like annual
billings, things like that as we roll out these programs. That's what
makes it up.
Walter Pritchard
Great. Thank you, Hamza. Next question is from Brian Essex at JPMorgan,
followed by Saket Kalia at Barclays. Brian, go ahead.
Brian Essex
Yeah. Thanks, Walter. And maybe to follow up on Hamza's question. Maybe
for Dipak, one thing that caught my ear was the comment about
discounting or offering a free period upfront for a certain period of
time. Wanted to get a sense of what kind of headwind within that
billings guidance is attributable to some of that discounting? And
should we be looking at other metrics like average TCV or annualized
TCV to get a sense of once those contracts hit a normal run rate, what
would a normalized growth rate look like?
Nikesh Arora
Thanks, Brian. Let me jump in here. I think let me clarify in terms of
the discounting notion. What's happening today is when I go to a
customer and say, listen, I'd like to replace your estate with the
entire platform. The customer says, wait, wait a minute, I got this
vendor for IPS, this for SD-WAN, this for SSC. And I got half of my
firewalls from another vendor, and they all expire at different points
in time. I'd love to deploy Zero Trust, but it's going to take me two,
three years as the end of life, so these vendors happen. And I'm scared
that if I rip and replace this at this point in time, is going to
create execution risk, not just that, it's going to hit economic risk.
So the propositions we're going to customers is, listen, let's lay out
a two-year, three-year cybersecurity consolidation and platformization
plan. We'll go start implementing today, you pay us when they're done.
So what it is, is more of a sort of like you can use our services until
you have to keep paying the other vendor, we'll take it from there. But
that's taking away a lot of the economic exposure and the execution
risk for our customers. Now you can call that discount or you can call
that a free offer. Our estimate is approximately it works out at about
six months' worth of free product capabilities to our customers on a
rolling basis. I think in about 12 months, as our offers start lapping
each other, we should go back to our growth rate we've been talking
about. And I think the right metric is the time frame is to look at
RPO.
Brian Essex
Okay. Thank you.
Walter Pritchard
Thank you, Brian. Next question is from Andrew Nowinski at Wells Fargo,
followed by Gabriela Borges at Goldman Sachs. Go ahead, Andy.
Andrew Nowinski
Thank you. I wanted to ask about the US federal spending. You said it
was soft in Q2, Nikesh and I think it's going to remain soft for the
next six months. But given your comments about how nation state
activity targeting the national infrastructure was increasing, I guess,
why do you think there's a disconnect between that trend? And were
those comments specific to your Palo Alto customers in the US Fed are
more broad-based?
Nikesh Arora
Look, part of it is particular to us. As you are aware, there was a
large program. We were part of down selected to be the only vendor.
We'd expected we staffed it to make sure we could implement it and we
could get the orders. That program didn't materialize at the pace and
at the spending levels we had expected. We saw an early glimpse in Q1
towards the end -- you saw it not show up in Q2, and we have it staffed
for Q3 and Q4. Remember, Fed is a lower duration number. So it has a
much more significant impact to revenue because Fed pays on an
annualized basis as opposed to an TCV basis. So you're seeing the
impact of that to our revenue for Q3 and Q4 and some of the billings
miss in Q2, which we had to make up with shipping from non-product
backlog. So that's kind of what happened in the Fed business. One's
bidding, twice shy. So we're being very cautious about how we expect it
to come back or not in the second half of the year. So it's more
pertinent to that as opposed to a broader comment around the federal
space. And don't forget, Fed is, in general, is not a next-generation
security adopter because they're usually slower on cloud services than
they are on traditional cybersecurity products.
Andrew Nowinski
Makes sense. Thanks.
Walter Pritchard
Thanks, Andy, Apologies. We're going to go back to Saket Kalia from
Barclays and then go to Gabriela Borges from Goldman. Go ahead, Saket.
Saket Kalia
Hey, great. Hey, thanks, guys. Nikesh, maybe for you, just to touch on
the platformization item a little bit deeper. I almost think about
these as ramping contracts and you tell me if that's off. But
specifically, as you look at the second half, maybe putting the
mechanics of the ramp aside, how do you sort of feel about sort of
underlying demand with metrics like ACV or bookings and what percentage
of your book of business do you sort of expect to shift to sort of this
ramping structure? Does that make sense?
Nikesh Arora
Yes, yes, that makes a lot of sense. I think part of what we're
noticing, Saket, is that we'd like to go from best-of-breed competitive
behavior with legacy vendors or New Year vendors and go straight to
platform competition. Because you noticed that we have a higher win
rate on platform deals. We have a higher win rate and consolidation
plays as opposed to best-of-breed head ones, which end up costing more
time and energy and you see very, I call it, rogue behavior where
people start trying to desperately hold on to customers. So we are
trying to shift our go-to-market towards a consolidation play and a
platform play. I think, as I said to earlier, the right number to look
at in this context is RPO. The underlying demand is strong. Our book of
business is strong. Our pipeline is strong. There is nothing going on
in the demand side. It's just that we see this pushing out of the
billings towards later parts as we get more and more consolidation
offers and platform offers out there. To give you an example, when we
acquired Talend , we made Talend free to every SASE customer, right? Is
there going and trying to upsell that every SASE customer and run the
risk of running the POCs other secure browsers. We've decided to give
it away free for the next 12 months until the customer's renewal comes
up. Now that has a billing impact in the 12-month time frame and
revenue impact. However, at the end of 12 months, all these will be
renewed because our aspiration is to get 50% of our customers to use
the enterprise browser. It's one of the best products we've acquired.
It has tremendous market traction. When we acquired it, there were 100
POCs in place going on at customers. And we told them, listen, if
you're a Palo Alto customer, just use it. It's part of our product.
It's part of the licensing. You don't have to pay us more, you don't
have to do a new contract. What that does, it allows us to penetrate a
market segment which would end up being competitive, we end up getting
some share and spend the rest of our lives trying to create more
traction and more market share in the future. Is that great. It's free.
Our incident response offer. We never had 400 Fortune 2000 customers
dealing with us on incident response. We launched an offer in 90 days,
we've got 400 customers. We gave them 250 hours free, right? That's
100,000 hours of breach consulting for free, but that drives a future
business for us where they become our cybersecurity partner of choice.
So we're trying to seed ourselves into our customers' platform and
consolidation strategies so that we don't have to keep fighting on
individual breach individual best-of-breed deal every time we go to a
customer.
Saket Kalia
Makes sense. Thanks, guys.
Walter Pritchard
Great. Thanks, Saket. We're going to go next to Gabriela Borges with
Fatima Boolani from Citi on deck.
Gabriela Borges
Hi. Good evening. Thank you. Nikesh, I wanted to ask how you think
about the risk of potentially cannibalizing the customers that are
willing to pay full price today as you implement the bundling strategy?
And then how do you think about --
Nikesh Arora
If you find them, let me know. Sorry, go ahead, please ask the
question. How do you?
Gabriela Borges
Yes. It's also a longer-term question on how do you think about maybe
catalyzing a race to the bottom with pricing pressure. So as you think
about ramp deals, technology that maybe was $100 today or a year from
now, by the time you get to renewal, is no longer worth $100 because
you've created pricing competition or you've created a competitive
response.
Nikesh Arora
I think there are two answers. Yes, let me answer two parts of the
question. I think this is -- to think about it as a price war is a
wrong way to think about it. Actually, we're averting a price war by
driving a platformization approach. I will explain how. First of all,
all of our customer deals are discussed, negotiated POC. So it's very
rarely that we have a customer who does not understand the value of
what they're offering. Because the competitive market, we have a price.
Our competitors are who normally rational competitors have a price. So
we don't think that we're cannibalizing a full price paying customer we
are possibly. I think what we are doing, Gabriela is that we're
avoiding the unintended consequence where a customer says, oops, I have
no time left. Because what happens to customers with all the right
intentions we'll say, I'll renew, I'll buy Palo Alto in 12 months from
now when my current contract goes away. They take a little while
analyzing and they get to six months, oh my God, if I'm not able to
deploy you in six months, I'm going to have an exposure, so I'm going
to go try and get a renewal. When they're trying to get a renewal, the
other vendors know this is not going to be their business for too long.
So that's when international pricing behavior happens. It's not when
they execute early and deploy early. So actually, averting the last
minute race to the bottom like you called it, by making sure our
customers don't have to worry about the execution risk and trying to
get renewals and trying to get best pricing in the last six months.
Gabriela Borges
Thank you.
Walter Pritchard
Great. Thanks, Gabriela. Next up is Fatima Boolani from Citi. And after
that, Roger Boyd from UBS.
Fatima Boolani
Hey, good afternoon. Thanks for taking my question. Nikesh, on the
platformization strategy. I was hoping you could drill into what the
catalyst was for this to be a midyear change. What were you hearing
from customers where you said we've got to pull the trigger in the
middle of the year because it's admittedly atypical. And then as a
related note, when you're rolling this out, if you've got customers who
are not paying you for six months, how are salespeople going to get
compensated for that free freemium sort of stance you're taking. So
just how are you protecting I guess, the piece of the go-to-market
organization as it relates to the new strategy?
Nikesh Arora
Thank you. Dipak did warn me this one will take a little bit of
explaining. And -- so let me go back to what Saket said. For simplicity
purposes, think about a ramp deal. So our sales people still get paid
on TCV, right? So they're still going to do a three-year deal or a
five-year deal. We're not doing six months or 12-months deals. So
you'll see that in our RPO. You'll still see us doing ramp deals for
the first six months may not be charged, but the next 4.5 years is or
the next 2.5 years to sort our salespeople will get paid on the TCV
deals like they get paid today, right? That's not a problem. I think
that's the best way to think about it and, I'm sorry, there was another
part that I missed, I apologize.
Fatima Boolani
Just the impetus of it being --
Nikesh Arora
I'd say the impetus, Fatima is fascinating. We are -- we've managed to
double our business in the last five years. And for us to get to a
double from here and more, we've had to step back and say, what did we
do? We got 21 categories where we're best-in-breed to realize we're
still fighting best-of-breed deals while we should be selling the
platformization strategy and we realized selling the platformization
strategy, which we have been for the last six months, as we said, we
have been trialing this out, we've been running this play with about
six months discovering, when we go in with the platform approach, we
win more often than if we go into the best-of-breed only. Otherwise, we
get whittled down on price, XDR to XDR or SASE to SASE. When you go
with XSIAM with XDR, XSIAM and XSOAR, then we don't get a little down
on price because customers see the TCO value and the ROI of doing the
entire replacement together. But the moment we go up with that is like
lots a lot of risk. I got to replace everything in the next six months.
I'm not willing to commit, let's go one at a time. And they go one at a
time, I get riddled down on price with a legacy vendor.
Walter Pritchard
Great. Thanks, Fatima. Next up, we have Roger Boyd, and after that, it
will be Jonathan Ho from William Blair.
Roger Boyd
Great. Thanks for taking the questions. Another follow-up on the
platformization. But as you get more accommodative on some of these
offerings, more aggressive on discounting. What are you expecting to
see from a contract duration perspective? It sounds like the focus is
going to be on RPO, but are you expecting to see contract duration
actually extend in exchange for some of this economic flexibility?
Thanks.
Nikesh Arora
I think that's a great question. I think the way to think about it is
that we still have two parts of our business. We'll still have the
regular part of our business, which is still growing and competing
best-of-breed. We expect that business to continue. Remember, this
platformization really applies to where customers have the opportunity
to consolidate and platformize. There are still many who are in
different parts of their cybersecurity journey or the IT journey. So to
the extent that we are dealing with the customer who's willing to
consolidate with us, you will see contract durations go up because
we're not going to do this if you're not going to get a commitment for
a three to five year deal because it does not behoove us to do those
deals if you don't see a long-term commitment to the customer because
we are going to be consolidating multiple security products to them and
working with them to implement them across the enterprise.
Walter Pritchard
Great. Thank you. Next question, Jonathan Ho from William Blair. And
after that, we've got Adam Borg from Stifel.
Jonathan Ho
Great. Thank you for taking my question. I guess one thing I'm trying
to understand a little bit better is this ability to standardize on the
platform, give you something similar to what Microsoft has done with
their E5 bundling to sort of force customers or package very attractive
terms for customers to switch. And I guess how does that maybe play out
in terms of customers' willingness to commit to a single vendor
platform? Thank you.
Nikesh Arora
That's a great question, Jonathan. Very apt question. Look, it allows
us to do a much better job of putting stuff together across our
portfolio as opposed to having to do each of these deals on an
individualized basis. So you're bang on the idea that this
consolidation benefits us and allows us to drive towards that platform
much faster. That's helpful. I think it also gives us financial
flexibility in terms of pricing deals. That's also very important, very
true. But I'll give you an example, right, just this morning, I was on
the phone and the customer is trying to buy an IoT capability.
Independently, that IoT capability is going to cost them north of $5
million. They already have our firewalls. We allowed them to activate
IoT of our firewalls, which cost us a lot less than $5 million. But
that allowed them to consolidate. And now when the renewal comes up in
six months or 12 months, they're going to be able to renew for a higher
amount. So that degree of flexibility that we can offer our customers,
but they don't have to go end up spending more and building yet another
vector that they have to go consolidate in the future is what we're
trying to drive to.
Walter Pritchard
Great. Thanks, Adam. Next up is Keith Bachman from BMO followed by Tal
Liani of BofA.
Keith Bachman
Hi. Thank you. You confuse me, Walter. I think Dipak for you, you
mentioned we certainly have the billings guide for Q3 and then implied
for Q4, something like 10%. And you indicated that this was going to be
a 12 to 18 month sort of impact as you try to anniversary consolidating
spend. But is there any trough or any way to think about FY'25? I mean
is it still double-digit billings growth that we should be thinking
about? Or any kind of metrics on how you think about the six to, or
excuse me, 12 to 18 month impact where you're trying to anniversary the
program?
Dipak Golechha
Yes, our aspiration is that towards the second half of '25, we should
revert back to our original expectations of mid to high double-digit
growth. But as I said, so 12 to 18 is obviously we have to go
experience these programs to see how they persist. But at some point in
time, they will start to lap and give us better upside in the larger
size deals that we're able to do.
Nikesh Arora
I just want to make one more point, sorry, on this context. One of the
things that I think should not be lost what Dipak has said. We have
maintained our absolute free cash flow guidance for the year and
absolute EPS guidance for the year. So we believe we can make all this
happen whilst holding our earnings and free cash flow constant.
Keith Bachman
Yeah, noted.
Walter Pritchard
Great. Next, we're going to go back to Adam Borg and then we're going
to go to Tal Liani for BofA.
Adam Borg
Awesome. Thanks, Walter. Thanks, everyone for taking the question.
Maybe just on XSIAM, it was good to see the traction there. Maybe talk
more about the displacement opportunity that you saw in the quarter. I
think you talked about replacing -- displacing up to 19 different
vendors since being introduced and talk more about how you plan to
further penetrate that as part of this broader platformization
approach. Thanks.
Nikesh Arora
Thanks, Adam. So Adam, we've displaced 19 unique different SIM vendors.
And the reason that's relevant for us is that tells us that our
platform has capability that spans multiple use cases and different
types of products in the market. It's not like we only replace one kind
of SIM. We have been able to replace different kinds of SIM, which
offer different capabilities in our customers. And we still believe
this is the fastest and best cybersecurity product that has been
created. We are north of 65 customers now in nine months. As we said,
we have signed a larger number of deals this quarter. And on a deal
basis, we did a $90 million in TCV. So we're really excited about it.
This does resonate with our customers. We are launching tomorrow an
offer to replace end points for our customers who are stuck with legacy
end points which is one of the things that holds us back in being able
to deploy XSIAM. We've also announced support of other non-legacy
vendors that they have in their infrastructure. So our customers have
been asking for that so we can support some of the other leading edge
XDR capabilities in the market. So we are making a concerted play to be
able to be the SOC of choice. It is radically different and better than
most other SIMs out in the marketplace. So we are putting a concerted
effort, very excited about where we are with it.
Adam Borg
Great. Thanks.
Walter Pritchard
Thanks a lot, Adam. Next up, Tal Liani from BofA followed by Brad
Zelnick at Deutsche Bank.
Tal Liani
Hi. First, just a clarification, you spoke about discounting or
pricing. Is there any product where you see more discounting than
others? Is it on the legacy firewall side? Or do we see it on SASE or
Cortex? Or should we look at it as a complete kind of pricing for the
platform?
Nikesh Arora
I think the best analogy is Jonathan's analogy, which is the bundling
of multiple things into one capability, more like I don't want to call
it that one. More like one of the other vendors has a certain bundling
philosophy. I think it's more like that than it is about individual
product categories because it's not about if you buy SASE, I'll make it
cheap, or if you buy XDR, I'll make it cheap. It's about -- if you
commit to my network security platform, the combined whole of it will
be much better TCO and ROI for you, and I'll take the execution risk.
You don't remember, the exit ARR for me is going to be no different
than it is today and I think that's why I don't like the word
discounting or reduced pricing. The exit ARR will be consistent with
what I would get today. I would end up taking the execution risk away
from the customer.
Walter Pritchard
Great. Thank you, Tal. Next up, we have Brad Zelnick from Deutsche
Bank. And after that, Matt Hedberg from RBC.
Brad Zelnick
Great. Thanks so much. I wanted to ask another question from a
go-to-market perspective, just extending on Fatima's question. Nikesh,
how do you align the channel to execute on this platformization
strategy where for you to win, somebody else has to lose. And their
economics are typically a function of present day billings not LTV. And
then also just extending on that, you've talked about the SIs as a real
strategic opportunity for you. Where do they fit into this platform --
I got to practice the word platformization strategy. Thank you.
Nikesh Arora
I know it's a new word. Only introduced five years ago when you didn't
believe us. But now we've got to worry about consolidation. Thank you,
Brad. So when I start to make fun with you, I start forgetting your
question. So look, the two, the SI, your channel question, so two parts
of it. It's a great question. First of all, channel does get
compensated on TCV. So I think part of what we said is our deals are 40
times when they use all three platforms compared to a single platform
deal. Our deals are north of 20 times than used two platforms, right?
Our top 10 customers spent 36% more with us than everybody else. And
that's all a function of -- as the deal size. As we do the
platformization, the deal size is going to get bigger. The channel gets
paid on TCV. So channel has a lot of incentive to help us drive this
platformization. I think you hit a very important point around SIs. We
have been working really hard over the last six months with our SI
partners to help activate and we're actually trying to get in front of
their engagements with customers as opposed to wait for their RFPs. We
have very strong relationships with almost every SI out there. It's
been a concerted effort. We've just Kristy Friedrichs who is the CEO of
New Relic to drive our partnership, she is the Chief Partnership
Officer. So we are putting a lot of attention and focus on it. And
we're positively enthused about the traction we're getting with the SI.
To think about it, the SIs are new to this business over the last three
to five years. They used to have cybersecurity businesses, but they
really doubled down and focused on it, you can take your favorite SI
and they all have a very strong practice in cyber security. And they
would much rather partner with one large player or a few large players
in the entire gamma of 3,000 cybersecurity companies that are out
there. So it fits their aspirations. It fits our aspirations are
getting ahead of it. So they are a critical part of this
platformization approach because these platform offers actually spin
out a lot more services revenue than individual best-of-breed offers.
Brad Zelnick
Thank you.
Walter Pritchard
Great. Thanks. Next up is Matt Hedberg from RBC followed by Joe Gallo
from Jefferies.
Matt Hedberg
Great. Thanks, Walter. I think one of the important points, Nikesh, you
made is, despite all these changes, free cash flow margins are
unchanged for fiscal '24 and the midterm targets, I guess the question
for Dipak, I just wanted to make sure I understood why that's the case.
It sounds like you said it was prior arrangements and optimizing vendor
payments. First of all, did I get that right? And I guess, secondly,
when we get into '25, are there other variables that we think of that
could potentially change that margin target or kind of confidence level
that, that margin target can hold into next year?
Dipak Golechha
So whilst we're not guiding to next year, we're pretty confident in our
free cash flow margin, as I said in my prepared remarks going forward.
Just to be clear, the thing that buttresses our free cash flow margin
the most is our operating margin. Okay? So we do expect that to
continue to increase. And that's kind of like one part of it. Secondly,
we've got more business that's coming off prior contracts that we've
signed. So we have visibility to that. We know when they're going to
come. We also have some incremental focus on factors that impact our
cash flow, for example, vendor payment terms. But when we put that all
together, look, we're pretty confident on the cash flow side.
Walter Pritchard
Great. Thank you. And we'll take our final question from Joe Gallo at
Jefferies. Go ahead, Joe.
Joseph Gallo
Hey, guys. Thanks for the question. I appreciate the candor and the
cash on spend fatigue and it's logical. But given your discounting
comments, can you just give an update on the competitive environment on
win rates or any metrics you're tracking, particularly in SASE. Have
you seen several vendors enter the market, several noting large
eight-figure wins. You've certainly made eight-figure deals look easy
over time, but what gives you confidence this is not competitive, and
this is more of a short-term hiccup?
Nikesh Arora
First of all, I would not classify this as a short-term hiccup. I know
you guys would love life that was linearly nice in quarters and moved
up in a beat-and-raise percentage basis. I'm trying to get this done in
the next three to five years where we become even a bigger and larger
platform in cybersecurity. If I step back and look at what we've done
over the last five years, we established the notion of the platform in
cybersecurity. It wasn't a notion that existed. I'm trying to
accelerate the deployment of the notion because I believe competitive
advantage in product in this industry the last two to three years. At
this point in time, I believe we have the largest competitive advantage
across our platforms in the market starting with our XSIAM product in
our SOC space. We think that is a 15-year-old legacy space, which we
should get quickly and go and deploy as quickly as we can across the
board and take you any friction in the process. On network security, we
did not have network securities, Zero Trust offers in the marketplace.
We are starting to see our customer bought $40 million of SASE and then
came and replaced all their firewalls with us in the last six months,
right? So we are seeing the customers show that behavior. We're trying
to take all the friction out of the way, they can make that happen. Now
if I break it down into the three categories we're in, I think in
network security, you'll see more and more zero trust offers where
hardware, software and SASE have to combine. There's very few vendors
in the space who can do that today. So they're trying to hold on to the
legacy positions. We're accelerating combination across that category.
You can make your own judgments as to which vendors are going to
benefit, which ones are not going to benefit as much. In the SOC space,
there is only one option, deploy AI in your SOC. The average technology
in the SOC space is 13 to 15 years old, right? That was not made for
AI. It was not ready for AI, it doesn't matter who you buy, it doesn't
matter what gets acquired. What is important is that you can actually
have an AI delivered data lake that delivers the capability of XSIAM.
On cloud, it's a new space. And we're beginning to see what's
fascinating is for us, our best cloud customers are the ones who are
delivering SaaS software to their customers. So we take the large
platform players, they use our cloud security because they understand
the need to have an integrated cloud platform. So we have green shoots.
We have trialed this. This is the time for us to double down and
accelerate. That's what we're doing. It's not a hiccup.
Joseph Gallo
Makes sense. Thank you.
Walter Pritchard
Great. Thanks, Joe, for that last question. With that, I'll pass it
over to Nikesh for his closing remarks.
Nikesh Arora
I know this was exciting for all of you guys, even more exciting for
us. We are committed. We believe this is the right way forward. We
believe this is the way we can deliver a faster platformization, a
faster way to consolidate the industry into a platform. We hope that in
the next five years, this allows us to double our business from here,
which is why I'm here. I want to say thank you to all of our employees,
all of our partners, and of course, all of you for taking the time to
listen to our earnings call.
