Fortinet (TICKER: FTNT) Fortinet Inc Ftnt Q4 2022 Earnings Call Transcript
Fortinet, Inc. (NASDAQ:FTNT) Q4 2022 Earnings Conference Call February
7, 2023 4:30 PM ET
Company Participants
Peter Salkowski - Senior Vice President of Finance and Investor
Relations
Ken Xie - Founder, Chairman of the Board, and Chief Executive Officer
Keith Jensen - Chief Financial Officer
Conference Call Participants
Brian Essex - JPMorgan
Fatima Boolani - Citi
Saket Kalia - Barclays
Hamza Fodderwala - Morgan Stanley
Brad Zelnick - Deutsche Bank
Shaul Eyal - Cowen
Adam Borg - Stifel
Tal Liani - Bank of America
Ittai Kidron - Oppenheimer
Andrew Nowinski - Wells Fargo
Raymond McDonough - Guggenheim Partners
Adam Tindle - Raymond James
Ben Bollin - Cleveland Research
Operator
Thank you for standing by, and welcome to the Fortinet Fourth Quarter
Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a
listen-only mode. After the speakers' presentation, there will be a
question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] As a reminder,
today's call is being recorded.
I will now turn the conference to your host, Mr. Peter Salkowski,
Senior Vice President of Finance and Investor Relations. Please go
ahead.
Peter Salkowski
Thank you, Valerie. Good afternoon, everyone. This is Peter Salkowski,
Senior Vice President of Finance and Investor Relations at Fortinet.
I'm pleased to welcome everyone to our call to discuss Fortinet's
financial results for the full-year and fourth quarter of 2022.
Speakers on today's call are Ken Xie, Fortinet's Founder, Chairman and
CEO; and Keith Jensen, our Chief Financial Officer. This is a live call
that will be available for replay via webcast on our Investor Relations
website. Ken will begin our call today by providing a high-level
perspective on our business. Keith will then review our financial and
operating results for the full-year and fourth quarter of 2022 before
providing guidance for the first quarter of 2023 and the full-year.
We'll then open the call for questions.
Before we begin, I'd like to remind everyone that on today's call, we
will be making forward-looking statements, and these forward-looking
statements are subject to risks and uncertainties, which could cause
actual results to differ materially from those projected. Please refer
to our SEC filings, in particular, the risk factors in our most recent
Form 10-K and Form 10-Q for more information. All forward-looking
statements reflect our opinions only as of the date of this
presentation, and we undertake no obligation and specifically disclaim
any obligation to update forward-looking statements.
Also, all references to financial metrics that we make on today's call
are non-GAAP unless stated otherwise. Our GAAP results and GAAP to
non-GAAP reconciliations are located in the earnings press release and
in the presentation that accompany today's remarks, both of which are
posted on the Investor Relations website. Ken and Keith's prepared
remarks for today's earnings call will be posted on the quarterly
earnings section of our Investor Relations website immediately
following the call. Lastly, all references to growth are on a
year-over-year basis unless noted otherwise.
I will now turn the call over to Ken Xie.
Ken Xie
Thanks, Peter, and thank you to everyone for joining today's call to
review our outstanding full-year and fourth quarter 2022 results. For
the full-year, revenue growth accelerated to 33%. We continue to gain
market share in the service security industry with customers
increasingly recognizing how Fortinet integrate and a single platform
approach to security delivers along total cost of ownership and a
greater return on investment than competing solutions.
Product revenue growth of 42% was very strong, making Fortinet a
leading product revenue company in the cybersecurity industry with
total product revenue of $1.8 billion. Our SD-WAN and OT bookings
together accounted for over 25% of total bookings. And our goal is to
keep growing and achieve #1 market share in network firewall Secure
SD-WAN and OT security market over the next couple of years.
For 20 years, Fortinet has made long-term strategies and investments
around the convergence of networking and security. Yesterday, we
announced our fifth-generation FortiSecurity processor, the FortiSP5.
This new SoC base for the ASIC has secure computing power rating for
major network security functions like Firewall to support 17x to 32x
greater than the average of our competitor similar price model using
general purpose CPUs and doubles the ASIC chip acceleration of
applications to Forti such as New Trust, SASE, 5G and our SD-Branch
with much better performance and efficiency.
According to the most recent IDC data on unit shipment of firewall
plants, Fortinet hold the #1 unit shipped market share position and
48%, providing Fortinet with an attractive economy of scale position us
well as making it difficult for competitors to develop their own ASIC
technology due to high entry barrier and significant investment that is
required. Fortinet is a huge security computing power advanced
advantages are able for the OS to integrate more security functions and
applications than our competitors with much better performance and much
lower energy consumption, resulting in a much lower total cost of
ownership while offering easier operations for our customers.
For example, a recent Forrester report highlighted that customers
deploying Fortinet Secure SD-WAN solutions achieved a 300% return on
investment over three years with a payback period of only eight months.
Fortinet's substantial installed base of product with reach functions
enable us to offer additional secure services, and upsell, integrated
and automated for the Fabric Product Solutions.
We recently announced several new and advanced services that help SoC
team reduce their operations cyber-risk while being more efficient and
handling cybersecurity issues. As networking and security continue to
converge and consolidate, we believe we are well positioned to achieve
our 2025 building target of $10 billion.
Before turning the call over to Keith, I would like to thank our
employees, customers, partners and suppliers worldwide for their
continued support and hard work. Keith?
Keith Jensen
Thank you, Ken, and good afternoon, everyone. As we look back at 2022,
we see the success of our strategy to lead in convergence and
consolidation as well as the combined power of our ASIC technology with
our integrated operating system. Combined, these efforts are driving
our strong financial results.
There's been an explosion of devices that must be connected to the
cloud, data center and edge compute. As a result, the infrastructure
has expanded to support secure connectivity via distributed firewalls,
it is no longer feasible to overlay security on top of networking in
the data center. They must be deployed as a converged solution.
Firewalls need to work seamlessly with networking and security
applications across the company's entire infrastructure. Fortinet is
leading the convergence trend with a wide range of technologies,
including network firewalls, Secure SD-WAN, 5G and OT security, all
embedded in our single operating system delivered as hardware,
software, cloud and as a service.
Traditional CPU-based solutions are very inefficient as supporting both
networking and security. That's why Fortinet developed proprietary ASIC
technology to build an application-specific solution. Yesterday, as Ken
mentioned, we announced our next-generation ASIC, the FortiSecurity
processor or FortiSP5, which allows line speed convergence of
networking and security at every network edge. The new seven nanometer
technology combines existing NP7 technology with new content processor
capabilities.
Our enhanced platform suite of integrated products is delivering on
customer demands for convergence, vendor consolidation, ease of
management and lower operating costs. The success of this strategy is
evident in our full-year 2022 results, and I'll start there.
Billings passed the $5 billion mark, totaling $5.6 billion and growing
34%. While revenue totaled $4.4 billion, with growth accelerating to
32%, the fifth consecutive year of revenue growth of 20% or more.
Driven by strong demand for our fabric and cloud security solutions,
enhanced platform technology billings and revenue both increased over
40% to $1.8 billion and $1.5 billion, respectively.
And despite a challenging global supply chain environment, product
revenue growth came in at 42%, our highest annual product revenue
growth rate in over 10 years. Our product revenue growth was driven by
the combined -- by the continued growth of our firewall use cases and
the addition of over 23,000 new customers. Service revenue was up 26%
to $2.6 billion, resulting in three consecutive years of accelerating
service revenue growth rates. Gross margin was strong at 76.3% and
operating margin outpaced our initial expectations, increasing 110
basis points to a new Fortinet record high of 27.3%. Our GAAP operating
margin of 22% is one of the highest in the industry, and we continued
our streak of being GAAP profitable every year of our 14-year history
as a public company.
Earnings per share increased 49% to $1.19. Free cash flow was a record
at $1.45 billion. Free cash flow margin was 33% and adjusted for real
estate investments, the free cash flow margin came in at 37%. And for
the year, we repurchased approximately 36 million shares at a cost of
$2 billion. Total deferred revenue increased 34% to $4.6 billion.
Short-term deferred revenue increased 32% to $2.35 billion. Quarterly
contract terms throughout the year were consistent with the year
earlier periods, including the fourth quarter at 28 months.
Before moving on to our Q4 results, I'd like to summarize our
enterprise success and highlight a few seven figure deals from 2022. We
saw great success during the year with our strategy to expand further
into the large enterprise segment as the number of deals over $1
million increased over 55% to a record 546 deals and billings on these
deals increased by over 70%.
If we look at a few of our large deals of the year, let's start with
the competitive upsell deal, Fortinet displaced a 11 different vendors
by consolidating the customer's network to security functions on our
Security Fabric. This worldwide wholesaler previously purchased secure
SD-WAN and FortiProxy.
Next on the list was a centralized network security solution that could
be managed and deployed to its 400 global locations. This customer
chose Fortinet Security Fabric for a selectable and integrated solution
across multiple scenarios, including work from anywhere, perimeter
security and data center segmentation.
In another upsell deal, a leading global manufacturer was spun off and
had to stand up the security and networking infrastructure separately.
The newly created infrastructures included remote access, SD-WAN,
application delivery control, authentication, endpoint, e-mail
protection and switching. Keys to our win included our Zero Trust
capabilities, a cloud-first SD-WAN strategy and the ease of integration
and convergence across our platform suite.
Lastly, in the new logo win, a large U.S. retailer with over 500
locations were struggling with a total cost of ownership of their
legacy security architecture. Keys to this win included delivering a
single pane of glass versus the multiple consoles they were using and
replacing the competitors' firewalls with our FortiGate's, delivering
URL filtering, WiFi security, and edge router replacement, all on our
unified and integrated FortiOS platform. This customer reported
anticipated savings of $29 million over five years.
Turning to Q4 results, both billings and revenue delivered new Fortinet
records with billings of $1.7 billion and revenue of $1.3 billion. Both
metrics increased over 30%. The strong fourth quarter revenue
performance reflects solid customer demand across both our core and
enhanced platform technologies.
In the fourth quarter, we added over 6,200 new logos, another new
Fortinet record reflecting the support of our channel partners, the
leverage they bring and the breadth of our worldwide customer base.
Taking a closer look at the fourth quarter, billings growth of 32%, was
driven by a 40% increase in enhanced platform technology billings,
which accounted for over one-third of total billings. Total revenue
growth of 33% was driven by a strong demand for core and enhanced
technology platforms, which increased 26% and 47%, respectively.
Product revenue grew 43% to $540 million. Service revenue was up 27% to
$743 million, driven by strong product revenue growth and strength in
our security subscriptions. Short-term deferred revenue grew 32% and
represents eight consecutive quarters of accelerating growth rates.
Total gross margin of 77.6% was driven by a 310 basis point increase in
product gross margin to 65.2%. Several factors converged to drive our
record high quarterly product gross margin, including legacy pricing
actions, easing supply chain cost pressures and improved discounting.
Service gross margin of 86.7%, ticked down 40 basis points due to
increased labor cost and our expansion in cloud services and the
related hosting costs. Operating margin of 32.5%, was up 400 basis
points year-over-year due to the strong gross margin performance and FX
benefit.
Looking to the statement of cash flow summaries on Slides 11 and 12.
Free cash flow was $497 million, adjusted free cash flow, which
excludes real estate investments was $510 million, representing a 40%
adjusted free cash flow margin. Cash taxes were $63 million, capital
expenditures were $31 million, including $13 million for real estate
investments. DSO increased 14 days sequentially and year-over-year to
89 days, also impacting service revenue growth.
Moving to guidance. We believe the continued innovations we made in
building our platform enables our customers' digital transformation
journey. And as Ken noted, customers are increasingly recognizing how
Fortinet is integrated and single platform approach to security can
deliver a lower total cost of ownership and a greater return on
investments than competing solutions.
Now I'd like to review our outlook for 2023, summarized on Slide 15,
which is subject to disclaimers regarding forward-looking information
that Peter provided at the beginning of the call. For the first
quarter, we expect billings in the range of $1.415 billion to $1.465
billion which at the midpoint represents growth of 24%. Revenue in the
range of $1.180 billion to $1.220 billion, which at the midpoint
represents growth of 26%. Non-GAAP gross margin of 75% to 76%; non-GAAP
operating margin of 23% to 24%, which at the midpoint represents an
increase of 150 basis points.
Non-GAAP earnings per share of $0.27 to $0.29, which assumes a share
count of between $795 million and $805 million, capital expenditures of
$80 million to $110 million, non-GAAP tax rate of 17%, cash taxes of
$20 million. And should also note that first quarter guidance assumes
backlog decreases slightly during the quarter.
For the full-year, we expect billings in the range of $6.710 billion to
$6.790 billion, which at the midpoint represents growth of 21%. Revenue
in the range of $5.370 billion to $5.430 billion which at the midpoint
represents growth of 22%. Total service revenue in the range of $3.335
billion to $3.365 billion, which at the midpoint represents growth of
27%, it implies a fourth consecutive year of accelerating service
revenue growth.
The service revenue guidance also implies product revenue growth of
15%. Non-GAAP gross margin of 75% to 76%, non-GAAP operating margin of
25% to 26%, non-GAAP earnings per share of $1.39 to $1.41, which
assumes a share count of between $805 million and $815 million. Capital
expenditures of $400 million to $450 million due to continued
investments in clouds, data centers and facilities. Non-GAAP tax rate
of 17%, cash taxes of $375 million, split somewhat evenly between the
first and second half of the year. The increase in cash taxes reflects
recently effective R&D capitalization and amortization requirements.
The full-year estimate assumes backlog approaches historical levels by
the end of the year.
Cybersecurity, but not immune to economic slowdowns is expected to
remain a comparatively safe harbor. And with a strong business model
and history of execution, we are confident that our market share gains
will continue. We remain on track to achieve our 2025 financial
targets, which include billings of $10 billion, revenue of $8 billion,
non-GAAP operating margin of at least 25%, and adjusted free cash flow
margin in the mid to high 30% range in 2025.
And with that, I'll now hand the call back over to Peter to begin the
Q&A session.
Peter Salkowski
Thank you, Keith. Operator, please open the call for questions.
[Operator Instructions]. Open up the call, please. Thank you.
Question-and-Answer Session
Operator
Thank you. [Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from Brian
Essex of JPMorgan. Your line is open.
Brian Essex
Great. Thank you. Good afternoon and thank you for taking the question.
And congrats on some solid results and a solid guide. I guess given
that we heard from one of your peers last night and they were I guess,
markedly more conservative or cautious on the macro than you seem to
be. Maybe for Ken and Keith, could you help us understand what you're
seeing in the market from a macro perspective, how enterprises are
spending. And how does any changes in the quarter relative to initial
expectations pan out with regard to demand, we're seeing sales cycles.
We're hearing about sales cycles elongating and budget scrutiny
ongoing. What are you seeing on your side?
Ken Xie
I took a question feedback from some customer partners. Their budget is
tight, but Fortinet solution has a better cost of total cost ownership
and also kind of even cost saving for some like a Secure SD-WAN
solution. And at the same time, we do see -- the use case of firewall
expanding much broader than before, especially for this OT security,
some other area, which pretty much, I'd say, network security may be
the only solution to secure some of this OT area. So that's where we
see the demand is still pretty strong. And so we probably -- we're
keeping gaining more market share in this well fragmented market.
Keith Jensen
Yes. Thanks, Ken. I spot on with that. I would also add, look, I think
we're all sensitive to the overhang from the macro environment and what
that may mean is [indiscernible]. But when we look at our internal
numbers, whether it's pipeline growth and even if we compare what
pipeline growth is today versus a year-ago, it's even up in terms of
percentage growth rates. The use cases, and I think in this
environment, the savings that we offer and the ROI that we provide and
some of the case studies that we provided in the call there are
examples of that. I think we're continuing to benefit from that, and we
do see that continued opportunities for market share gains even in this
environment.
Brian Essex
Got it. Maybe just for a quick follow-up then, Keith. As you think
about the level of conservatism in your fiscal '23 guide, I mean,
stronger than, I think some had expected. I know I'm going to get the
question tomorrow how much conservatism is in there. What gives you
confidence in hitting that kind of level of performance, particularly
with regard to billings. And then any change to your 2025 targets as
you kind of look at the strength that you're seeing in the market from
here on out?
Keith Jensen
Yes. I think that the approach that we take, if you will, is consistent
this time around with what we've done in prior years, but with
certainly added conservatism in it to reflect what's happening or what
may happen with the macro environment. And first and foremost, we start
with the pipeline and looking at the pipeline growth there and the kind
of the timing of the pipeline and making sure that we have deals that
are teed up for the middle of the year and perhaps even to the second
half of the year. So there's ample opportunity there.
You also want to make sure that you've got sales productivity numbers
that make sense and sales capacity numbers that make sense. Yes, I
think there will be some tailwind from the backlog, which I commented
on in the comment that we're going to get some benefit from that as it
continues to burn down.
But keep in mind that we have seen some changes in cancellation rates,
and I think we've added a significant amount of conservatism there
around cancellation rates. Again, so I think it's really about the
pipeline, it's the tailwind that we have and it take us the advantages
that we're offering and total cost of ownership in this environment.
Brian Essex
Okay, that's super helpful. Thank you very much.
Operator
Thank you. One moment please. Our next question comes from the line of
Fatima Boolani of Citi. Your line is open.
Fatima Boolani
Hey, good afternoon. Thank you for taking my questions. Keith, for you,
just with respect to the services revenue guidance at 27%. That's not a
material difference from the cadence you've been running at this year.
And I'm curious what sort of input embed that revenue segment for you?
And I ask because we have the dynamic of some of your customers
delaying their subscription registrations over the course of '22.
And then we also have the dynamic of a lot of your customers not having
realized the pricing increases that you've expected in the last 12 to
18 months. So I'm curious as to why with those positive inputs, you --
we wouldn't see better services growth. And what sort of things that
you're being conservative about there? And then a quick follow-up,
please.
Keith Jensen
Yes. I think it kind of goes back to Brian's question a moment ago in
terms of -- with the level of conservatism and caution that's in the
guide. And I know that historically, I've often complained that I don't
get much room in the services line from where the consensus is versus
what I'm forecasting. At a 27% number, I think that's pretty much right
on top of what the street of that for the full-year. And I think in
this macro environment, I think that's a great -- a good place for us
to be at this point of the year for full-year guidance.
Fatima Boolani
Understood. And any commentary on operating margin and operating
profitability performance because we are seeing compression into next
year, certainly on a quarterly basis. But anything to be mindful of
there as it relates to maybe onetime items that are peeling out just
perhaps why not see better follow-through in profitability? And that's
it for me. Thank you.
Keith Jensen
Yes. Yes, I think our guidance is pretty much in sync with where we are
historically at this point in time and consistent what we always talked
about the 25% margin number. But I think the -- what you may be
suggesting or inferring is really, it's all about FX, if you will, when
you look at 2022 compared to 2023. We had a nice benefit from FX in
2022. And I think in terms of what our assumptions are for 2023, like
the rest of people, we read the economic reports from the big banks and
so forth and what the dollar is expected to do. And I think we've
really pulled out a lot of that benefit by the end of this year. And so
you're not really going to see that in the year-over-year comparison.
Operator
Thank you. One moment please. Our next question comes from the line of
Saket Kalia of Barclays. Your line is open.
Saket Kalia
Okay, great. Hey guys, thanks for taking my questions here. Maybe first
for maybe a question for both Ken and Keith. Clearly, SD-WAN and OT are
becoming a bigger part of the business and that too with higher growth
rates. And so maybe the question is, how do you folks think about the
growth rate or runway for growth in those two businesses either
separately or together, over the next couple of years, as part of the
total growth equation or part of the $10 billion goal, however you want
to think about it, but really curious about that SD-WAN and OT part of
the business that's been doing so well.
Ken Xie
I think there is two parts. First, I totally agree with you said that
SD-WAN and the OT market growing faster than the network security
average. And on the other side, we do believe our solution has huge
advantage compared to other competitors. So both SD-WAN, OT market is
still pretty fragmented and compared to our home growth integrated
solution and leverage for the ASIC company and power.
So advantage much huge compared to other competitors, quite some mostly
come from acquisition. And at the same time, they don't have the ASIC
help to increase speed, lower the cost and the power consumption. So
that's why we feel we're keeping growing above the market, so above the
market growth rate. There's a different research about how the market
is growing. But I do agree it's a fast-growing market compared to the
cybersecurity space and there will be a lot of potential going forward.
Saket Kalia
Got it. Got it. Very helpful. Keith, maybe just a quick follow-up for
you. Actually, great to see the billings duration stay roughly similar.
I'm curious if you could just talk anecdotally or just specifically
just around how you're thinking about billings duration here in '23?
And whether that's been something that you feel like customers have
pushed on given the interest rate environment that we're in?
Keith Jensen
Yes. I don't think that we've really seen customers push on the term.
Obviously, at 28 months -- 28 months, which is kind of been keeping
where we've been historically. But I do think in the fourth quarter, we
certainly had conversations with customers that were I think perhaps
even more focused on cash flow, if you will, than they were on
discounting in terms of extended payment terms and that sort of thing.
So if I were to look at the -- what I'm hearing back from customers, it
was all about cash protection. And with that, I assume if I were trying
to do a lot of five-year deals or something like that, I might have
felt more pressure. But given the SMB mix of our business and our
partner footprint, obviously, didn't come through in the numbers
really.
Saket Kalia
Yes, absolutely. Great to see. Thanks guys.
Operator
Thank you. One moment please. Our next question comes from the line of
Hamza Fodderwala of Morgan Stanley. Your line is open.
Hamza Fodderwala
Hi, guys. Thank you for taking my questions. Good evening. Keith, I
wanted to clarify something you said about the cancellation rates. I
think you mentioned that you're seeing some changes there. Can you
maybe elaborate on that a little bit? I think like the past few
quarters, it's been around 4%, 5%. Just if you could provide any more
color on that comment?
Keith Jensen
Yes. We did see a pickup to if we want to call it mid-single digits in
Q3, we saw it tick up to high-single-digits in fourth quarter -- in the
fourth quarter. And we've anticipated this, particularly as the backlog
starts to shift its mix as the firewalls. There's still a significant
amount of firewalls in the backlog, but it really now has tilted
towards the network equipment, the switches and the access points.
And so as you would expect, one last comment on that, as we see the
shift in the mix in the backlog as well as the pick-up in the
cancellation rates, I would also offer that as part of the guidance
setting process, I think we've taken a fairly conservative approach to
cancellation rates on what they -- how they may impact 2023 or said
another way, we're not expecting all the backlog that exists at the
beginning of the year to convert in 2023 because we think there'll be
some cancellations.
Hamza Fodderwala
Got it. And just maybe a follow-up for Ken. I think SD-WAN is now
nearly a $1 billion business for Fortinet which is quite remarkable
because you just started selling it, I think, maybe four years ago. I'm
curious as more of that base starts to come up for refresh. What are
other monetization drivers do you see for SD-WAN, whether it be
attaching more services or perhaps increasing the price points. I'm
curious how you're thinking about that?
Ken Xie
Definitely more service, whether under the overlay service for SD-WAN
because our SD-WAN has all the security function and also a lot of --
deployed case whether supporting work from core from anywhere or kind
of helping enterprise reduce their total cost of networking all these
things. We do see a lot of additional service they need. At the same
time, we also see the service provider starting more working together
with us, offer some quite additional service beyond -- that's the
traditional SD-WAN. So that's also helping drive much more service
going forward.
Hamza Fodderwala
Thank you.
Operator
Thank you. One moment please. Our next question comes from the line of
Brad Zelnick of Deutsche Bank. Your line is open.
Brad Zelnick
Great, thank you very much and congratulations on just blow out results
and guidance, a nice job. My first question is just around the new ASIC
FortiSP5. Can you remind us what if any impact we might expect in terms
of customer purchasing patterns and what you've seen in the past and
the extent perhaps it can drive accelerated demand and/or maybe the
risk of trade-down effect? And I've got a follow-up. Thanks.
Ken Xie
Probably want to take some time, I'd say, maybe one to two years to
refresh the product. And that's where every quarter, we tend to release
one or two products, whether leverage new ASIC or the new CPU of
Smarter network chip in the industry. I don't feel it will be a
significant impact up and down of the result and will be more smooth
transition. Because security deployment is a kind of a -- take long
time to design, evaluate, deploy and also very, very long sales cycle.
At the same time, the life cycle of the product also tend to be quite
long, like seven to 10 years.
So that's where the ASIC each generation definitely will help in and at
the same time has a huge advantage compared to using general-purpose
CPU. So that's where we're keeping gaining market share. But consider
the switching costs, consider the long cycle, sales cycle and
deployment cycle. And also, we also need time to put ASIC into a new
product, which also taken in a few months, three to six months, thus I
do see it will be like a more long-term positive impact instead of
short-term.
Keith Jensen
Yes, Brad, I would only offer again for context. I think that -- this
is what Fortinet has been 20 generation. It's a chip probably now we
think content processors and network processors and systems-on-a-chip.
And I think that Fortinet, Ken and Michael have actually shown the
ability to transition through those generations of chips. And if you
look back at the financials, I think it's a little bit difficult to
find a year that for a period of time, really saw spike because of the
new chip. These are much more long-term plays. And I think the approach
here is to execute in a smooth fashion over a number of years.
Brad Zelnick
Thanks for the reminder and Keith, can you just expand on your comments
around DSOs being up sequentially year-on-year and the impact of
services revenue? And related to that, I recall you had a change in
policy around subscription activations. Is that also impacting services
revenue. Any help there would be great. Thanks.
Keith Jensen
Yes, the change in activation policies started February last week, I
believe, February 1. So we'll start to see that going forward. What I
was referring to is the -- is really all about linearity, right? That's
what it gives you insights to. And if I see my DSO go from, call it, 75
days to 89 or 90, you can kind of start doing the math there and see
that's a 20% increase in DSO, and it's really driven by how linearity
came through in the quarter.
And when linearity starts shifting that much, we lose the opportunity
to gain service revenue from sales early in the quarter that would
normally activate. So we really didn't get a lift in service revenue
from in-quarter deals the way that we would have expected because of
linearity.
Operator
Thank you. One moment please. Our next question comes from the line of
Shaul Eyal of Cowen. Your line is open.
Shaul Eyal
Thank you. And good afternoon and congrats on the great performance and
guidance. Keith, given the slightly lower-than-expected 4Q service
revenue, how should we be thinking about the first quarter service
revenue growth?
Keith Jensen
Yes. I think that we kind of remain truthful to or faithful to the
notion of providing service revenue guidance for the full-year and kind
of leave the Street work out the numbers from that point going forward.
I think that certainly, as we kind of look at laying out the year and
with the backdrop of the macro that we're all concerned about, I don't
think we really wanted to push too hard on some of the metrics that we
didn't need to push on. And I think where we ended up with is pretty
consistent in the quarter with our consensus when we look at our
internal allocations between product and service revenue.
Shaul Eyal
Understood. And maybe one more. As we think about the non-GAAP
operating margins and really great performance, should we be thinking
of the target to be sort of an average of 25% over the period or a
floor of 25% over the course of the next few years?
Keith Jensen
I'm going to answer yes. Yes, you should be thinking about one of those
two ways. Look, I think we're driven by being above 25% operating
margin, right? I think the ones that -- the last few years have taught
us is life full of surprises. And so locking into a fixed commitment is
a little bit challenging sometimes. But clearly, we manage the business
as if it's the floor.
Shaul Eyal
Understood. Thank you so much.
Operator
Thank you. One moment please. Our next question comes from the line of
Adam Borg of Stifel. Your line is open.
Adam Borg
Thanks so much for taking the questions. Maybe for Ken or Keith, just
on sales headcount. Obviously, you guys have been aggressively growing
sales and marketing headcount in recent years, and it's nice to see the
enterprise success you talked about. Just curious where we are in sales
force productivity. And how we should think about sales headcount
growth and even overall headcount growth in '23? And I have a
follow-up.
Ken Xie
Yes, we are continuing hiring. But at the same time, we want to keeping
the efficiency and is not dropping the efficiency for the sales and
marketing. And at the same time, there's some long-term investment,
whether in R&D, the infrastructure supporting, we will continue to need
to make. So that's why we do expect the total head count will keep it
increased, but probably the rate that just like the last few years will
be below the top line increase.
Keith Jensen
Yes. I think just building Ken's comment one of the notes that we do
track tenure. We talked about it last quarter. Tenure [ph] would be
people that have been here for, say, people have been here more than
six months. And I commented last quarter, the tenure was up, I think,
eight points. It's actually moved back to historical norms now. And
tenure is kind of a key component of productivity as we see -- as we go
forward.
Adam Borg
Got it. And maybe just a quick follow-up just on the FortiGate and
entry mid and high. It's nice to see really strong midrange growth is
interesting at the high end leased by my math was the lowest mix since
2017. Just curious if anything to comment there. Thanks so much.
Ken Xie
That sometimes depend on certain like products or backlog. I think
that's probably the average still pretty similar. We don't see much,
but sometimes from quarter-to-quarter, it may change a little bit. But
I have to say the total mix is still pretty much the same.
Keith Jensen
Yes. I think that's one of the challenges you have in the current
environment and the supply chain was really doing funny things, if you
will, into delivery, and we don't give you a lot of insights to orders
that we were taking in, but we provide billings numbers, you get some
distortion there just simply based upon what's available. Specifically,
we saw a significant amount of availability of the 100F products, if
you will, which are a midrange product. And you're seeing that
availability came in the fourth quarter, and it shifted that mix in the
way you just described it.
Operator
Thank you. One moment please. Our next question comes from the line of
Tal Liani of Bank of America. Your line is open.
Tal Liani
Hello. Thank you. There's going to be one day call that no one is going
to butcher my name, and I'm going to be very happy. But I wanted to ask
you two things. First of all, could you provide a backlog for 4Q or
anything about it? I'm trying to calculate the bookings for the year
and what happens to bookings? And any color on backlog would be great.
And the second question, a few people asked you about the services
growth for next year. I want to ask you about the product growth. The
product growth is going from 42% to 15%, if my math is right, from last
year to next year to this year. And on the other hand, your commentary
is positive. It's -- there's more activity, there's more product sales.
So can you take us through the dynamics of product growth and also the
connection, the relationship between services and products. Thanks.
Keith Jensen
Yes, I'll start with the last one first, if you will. I think that I
think we are very excited about the opportunities in front of us in
terms of how the company is executing. But we are certainly also very
cognizant of the unknown of the macro environment. And I think there's
just an opportunity here in terms of how we guide for the full-year to
really bake in concerns around the macro and how it may manifest in the
coming months -- coming quarters. So I think you're seeing that, and I
kind of made a comment earlier that historically, it's been tough for
me to be somewhat cautious on service revenue because it's so visible.
We're looking at short-term deferred revenue and the conservatism
oftentimes ends up in product revenue. I think there's still an element
of that in this conversation.
Ken Xie
Yes, I think for the backlog like what I said in the last one or two
quarter, it's continued shifting to the network area, network and the
Wi-Fi which is more industry standard product. I'd say probably today,
most of the backlog will come from the network side and the Wi-Fi side,
which has a higher cancellation rate. And -- so that's where like Keith
has mentioned, we take a pretty, when it's positive conservative, but
that definitely pretty good estimate what will the impact for the whole
year on all these -- the backlog for the product revenue.
And product revenue, definitely, we see probably going forward, the
benefit of the new ASIC and also some of the new products that were
helping and also some of the case, the use case -- additional use case
of the firewall definitely also are helping, but it will take some
time. So that's where we tend to be more careful to forecast. At the
same time, we do see long-term, we still have a huge advantage compared
to other competitors because the investment we made in the product, in
the hardware, in ASIC give us huge advantage of the total cost of
ownership towards container keeping gaining market share in that space.
Tal Liani
And do you provide some numbers about the backlog or maybe how material
it is to revenues as a percentage of revenues?
Ken Xie
I think it's -- since it's been a large difficult to forecast at the
same time, with the change in cancellation and also most of the backlog
related to networking WiFi not a core product. So that's where, since
last quarter, we no longer provide detail of the backlog, we feel that
could be a little bit misleading if we keep in providing that.
Keith Jensen
I think we can add over some directional comments here with it. So the
headlines would be that backlog was up year-over-year,
quarter-over-quarter it was down. But as you start thinking through how
to treat the backlog in terms of doing your own models going forward,
again, we would come back and remind you of a couple of things. We
expect the cancellation rates are going to increase, and that's baked
into our guidance, as we look at things.
And when we say return to historical norms in the commentary, I think
we probably would have three years ago had backlog for professional
services and training that may have been in the $30 million range. So
maybe with growth now you're probably looking at a steady state that
could get you over $40 million to $50 million. So just a note of
caution, they'll just take all that backlog and assume it's all going
to convert into billings and revenue in 2023 given those dynamics.
Tal Liani
Got it. Thank you.
Operator
Thank you. One moment please. Our next question comes from the line of
Ittai Kidron of Oppenheimer. Your line is open.
Ittai Kidron
Thanks. Hey guys. Nice quarter. Keith, I was wondering if you could do
a little bit of a deeper dive for us into the enhanced part of your
business, if there's a way for you to kind of break it down a little
bit for us by product. And perhaps rank order for us, categories which
are growing above the average for the category and below the average
for the category. I would just like to get a little bit more color as
to the change in mix within that?
Keith Jensen
Yes. I don't know that I've really seen a change in the mix, if you
will. I think the -- when you look at the -- what we call the
FortiManager, FortiAnalyzer. And certainly, the virtual machines are
doing very, very well. And then as you start looking at the tail of the
fabric products in the -- on the areas of EDR and monitor and SIM and
so on and so forth, I think that they're smaller dollar totals, but
sometimes very dramatic and exciting growth rates. So I want to be a
little bit careful about getting -- painting anybody in too great a
light in terms of their contribution because everybody is contributing.
Certainly, the networking equipment part of the business has done very,
very well, and this is a key component of this convergent story that
we've talked about, and it remains probably about one-third of the
fabric business.
Ittai Kidron
Got it. Excellent. And then just going back to the cancellation rate,
just to make sure I understand this. How much of this is tied into
supply chain, meaning of supply chain? Is it getting better
availability is no longer an issue? Customers are less perhaps
interested in getting too far ahead in line and waiting for product.
How much of that is a factor in this?
Ken Xie
The supply chain environment definitely have some improvement for
networking for the WiFi. That's where sometimes a customer, they may
have a multiple order to see which vendor can deliver because a lot of
networking equipment WiFi is a pretty standard product. Even for us, we
do add quite some security functions in there. But at sometimes
customers just cannot wait. So that's where we see a little bit higher
cancellation rate with -- I think right now, the overall supply chain
environment, I think is improving.
Keith Jensen
Yes. I think the conversation around cancellation rates, a few things
there. We said it went from mid single-digits to high single-digits.
And then as we built into the guidance, it is a multiple that we built
in the guidance of what we just saw in the fourth quarter. What we
actually get out of it, we'll see. But the reason to be so cautious
about it is what Ken is talking about. We knew that we had an advantage
with firewalls and dealing with our suppliers and our vendors and we
thought we'd be successful in pushing down that component of backlog
first. And indeed, the mix has shown that. I think it's now something
on the order of about 75%, 25% between networking equipment and
firewalls still firewalls in the mix.
But as Ken pointing out is there may be more risk with that networking
equipment of cancellations as we go forward, and particularly its a
backlog deal for those elements continue to age out a little bit as we
move through this process. In terms of continuing supply chain
challenges, I'm not quite sure I was making the length on that. I don't
-- I guess that would have an impact on the continuing to build of
backlog. But as we said in our comments, we really expect to get to a
backlog number by the end of this year that's much more closely aligned
with our historical norms.
Ittai Kidron
Very good. Thanks. Good luck.
Operator
Thank you. One moment please. Our next question comes from the line of
Andrew Nowinski of Wells Fargo. Your line is open.
Andrew Nowinski
Okay. Thank you. Just two quick questions. First, I want to ask a
question on EMEA. You've had five quarters now of accelerating growth
in Europe, and that seems to defy the macro trends that we consistently
hear about in Europe. Just wondering if there's something specific in
your portfolio that might be driving that strong growth in Europe?
Ken Xie
I think we definitely have a pretty long tenure and a good team there.
And at the same time, the case, the firewall case also expand quite
well in Europe, in some countries there. And some of the service
provider carrier, they are a little bit more ahead compared to some
bigger service provider were the U.S. on moving some new solutions,
including some 5G SD-WAN. So that's where we continue to see some good
growth there.
Also, we kind of surprisingly even during the recession, the SMB sector
growing quite strong compared to some enterprise. Enterprise more about
how to lower the cost ownership, protect some of their own kind of
profit margin. But SMB, they do see the importance of cyber security,
especially in retina were they are starting more targeted SMB right
now. So we do see quite strong growth in SMB and so that's also helping
some regions in Europe.
Andrew Nowinski
Got it. Okay. And then I wanted to ask about gross margins. So you
talked about easing cost pressures and lower discounting as some of the
levers that drove that better-than-expected gross margin. I guess,
number one, how sustainable do you think those factors are as we look
into fiscal '23? And then when you launched new ASIC, like you did
earlier today, is that a headwind to gross margin initially?
Keith Jensen
Yes. I think a few things we talked about price benefits, the
discounting and then some easing of the impact of the supply chain. I
think the price benefit is something that will obviously stay with us
in the future. And so we should still get a tailwind from that.
However, discounting and supply chains, call it, savings for lack of a
better term, that's what we relate to our history of price increases.
And I think we kind of reached a very kind of maybe the high watermark
in terms of being -- having price increases covering those costs, and
that will start to settle back down to a more normalized pattern going
forward. Meaning that we'll still have inflationary cost increases, but
we've really slowed down the price benefits, the price increases. So
net-net, price increases continue, discounting and supply chain
benefits may not.
Andrew Nowinski
Got it. Thank you.
Operator
Thank you. One moment please. Our next question comes from the line of
Raymond McDonough of Guggenheim Partners. Your line is open.
Raymond McDonough
Hi, thanks. Maybe for Ken or Keith. The last time we saw product growth
accelerate for two years was back in 2014 and '15, you had two really
strong years of product growth, and that was followed by a pretty sharp
deceleration of growth over the next two years. And I understand the
business is a lot different than it was back then, but there does seem
to be some similarities, at least how it relates to the macro
environment and your results obviously point to you guys navigating it,
the macro quite well. But you did reiterate your '25 guidance, which I
believe implies mid-teens product growth. So I guess the question is,
why should we think this time is different? Is it just that you have a
significantly larger portfolio of solutions? Is it broader acceptance
from customers willing to consolidate networking and security
functionality. Any comparisons or contrast you can provide specifically
as it relates to product growth versus, if you will, the previous cycle
would be helpful.
Ken Xie
I think in the 2014, 2015 last the outbreak of a weather target so many
case, which a lot of enterprise tried to upgrade from the traditional
connection-based firewall to the next-gen firewall, which including
some prevention and other things. So that's where it's more like kind
of refresh more in the enterprise area. So we do see some strong growth
there after the severe issue.
And then by this time, we see there's a few things. One is really
during the pandemic, there's a new infrastructure build supporting a
homework anywhere. At the same time, the ransomware attack quite
broadly hit the whole industry. And another part, we keep on seeing the
convergence, which is like SD-WAN, the 5G, the WiFi and also internal
segmentation. So that's a much broader used case of the firewall
deployment and also including OPG, a lot of more devices being
connected. So we feel this time it is really kind of a more broad
firewall used case kind of apply to the whole infrastructure. That's
what we kind of more emphasized the convergence is a little bit
different than the last time it's like eight, nine years ago. So that's
why we feel this time probably will be more smooth transition because
the traditional firewall, whatever will not go away.
And at the same time, that's more used case convergence into the
traditional networking area, expanding to the OT some other area, we're
helping keeping driving the product revenue growth and then followed by
the additional service revenue. So that's the chance we're planning.
Raymond McDonough
That's helpful. And if I could, maybe a follow-up. You talked a little
bit about the momentum in large deals and enterprise deals in '22. But
given the macro environment, could you compare and contrast maybe Keith
or Ken behavior you're seeing from larger customers and maybe those on
the smaller end of the spectrum. Are you seeing more deal delays
upmarket, more propensity to consolidate functionality at the lower
end? Anything -- any more color would be helpful.
Ken Xie
Yes, it's definitely helping the customer lower the total cost of
ownership, both on the management cost and also on the product service
cost, which we have here an advantage over the competitors. So that's
where we see a lot of a big enterprise customers. They definitely want
to -- when they see the renewal, when they see all this -- need to add
additional protection for the infrastructure, we do see this like how
to have a better total cost of ownership and at the same time, leverage
a single integrated platform, automated platform to offer better
security networking together.
Even there's a trend to merge the traditional network operating team
and security operating team together to making the stock and not kind
of combined together and also converge on the traditional networking
and security together. So we do see some trends happening in the big
enterprise and which we kind of developed technology and the long-term
investments starting to see. I mean, stating benefit for the trend.
Keith Jensen
Great.
Raymond McDonough
Yes, go ahead.
Keith Jensen
Like everybody else, I mean, you're reading about people talking about
deals taking longer to get across the finish line and more approvals
and so forth. And I don't think we were immune to that by any stretch
of the imagination. Keep in mind as we're going through as the world is
moving through this.
At the same time, Fortinet's kind of expanding from just seven figure
deals. And I think we talked about 546 seven figure deals or more last
year, if I remember correctly, a huge number. Now adding more and more
eight figure deals. So I think we're probably seeing huge
opportunities, but we're also getting exposed to how that approval
process works and how we manage with our sales team, our customers
through that process.
Raymond McDonough
Great. Thanks for the color and congrats on the strong results.
Operator
Thank you. One moment please. Our next question comes from the line of
Adam Tindle of Raymond James. Your line is open.
Adam Tindle
Okay. Thanks. Good afternoon. Keith, I wanted to start with pricing. I
think we picked up if we got this right, another pricing increase
announced in January effective in February. Wondering if you could
touch on the rationale and early response to that -- where are we in
the elasticity of demand? And thinking forward, obviously, costs are
ultimately going to normalize, hopefully, in your model. What would be
the strategy for you once costs normalize, would you reduce price or
capture margin? Thanks.
Keith Jensen
Yes, on that part first. I mean I think we'll continue to monitor the
market and make the appropriate adjustments there. I don't seeing
inflation go backwards it's probably not something that's happened a
lot in history, but it could happen, I guess. In terms of the most
recent price increase that we talked about, it's almost a non-event to
me. It's extremely low single-digits growth and after discounting, it's
a fraction of an interest point.
Adam Tindle
Got it. Okay. And then maybe just as a follow-up for Ken. I wanted to
ask on SASE competition. When your main competitors has said they've
integrated their SASE offering with SD-WAN and Secure Web Gateway in
particular. They're pushing that sales motion across the entire sales
force now. As we think about Fortinet, obviously, very strong in
SD-WAN, but that Secure Web Gateway or proxy piece is perhaps not as
prevalent or a different strategy. It's clearly not impacting your unit
market share at present, but just thinking forward to competing and
differentiating in SASE now that your competitor really pushing that
motion across the entire sales force? Thank you.
Ken Xie
Yes, I think we -- our strategy, like [indiscernible] seeing in the
last few years is; first, we want to have a SASE or integrated in the
same system, the same OS, including all the SD-WAN or the SASE
function. So making SASE can be more easily broader deploy and also
working with service provider to leverage their infrastructure to offer
a SASE. So it's a little bit different than some of the SASE players
right now in the market. So we do believe this is highly integrated the
single system as will be more efficient and same time will be more
secure. And so that's what we're keeping building and whether the new
FortiASIC [indiscernible] and also the new FortiOS reflect all this
kind of development we reported into the solution.
At the same time, we're keeping working closely with pretty much all
the carrier service provider, even cloud provider to offer SASE
together. And that's also a little bit different strategy compared to
some other SASE player. So we do believe long-term leverage
infrastructure, a lot of our own service provider telecom provider had
will be much more efficient than the profit model compared to some of
the SASE solution or player kind of losing money, which will be
difficult to last long. So that's what we will keeping invest in this
area. And also, we want to be a long-term player in this space and also
we'll be keeping internal innovation R&D and keeping driving this
space.
Adam Tindle
Very helpful. Thanks and congrats on the year.
Ken Xie
Thank you.
Operator
Thank you. One moment please. Our next question comes from the line of
Ben Bollin of Cleveland Research. Your line is open.
Ben Bollin
Good afternoon. Thanks for taking the question. Could you share a
little bit of what is happening with respect to the cloud
infrastructure build-out. Tell us a little bit about what you're doing,
where you are in the progress and customer response thus far? And then
I had a follow-up on the networking category.
Ken Xie
Yes. We continue keeping building of the infrastructure, including the
cloud. Also our strategy a little bit different than 100 players we
tend to build out ourselves just like we -- you can see the investment
in some of the real estate. Quite some of that also go to the -- like a
data center infrastructure that give us much better cost and also more
long-term benefit just like how we -- the investment made in early real
estate kind of benefit our office cost, rental costs. So that's where
we're using the cost saving we get from this rental keeping invest into
some more long-term infrastructure real estate. We do see that we're
keeping benefit the company a long time.
But at the same time, like I said, also partner working with car
service providers that's other strategy we have managed some of their
infrastructure. So that's also make a win-win both party or benefit or
will be profit. That's also the strategy we have.
Ben Bollin
And within that, Ken, could you speak to, is this -- is it purely cost
is latency part of the narrative? Is it being closer to your customers?
What's the broader strategy within it?
Ken Xie
Not just, but also will make it easy to manage easy to scale. Even some
of the SASE solution I had to be the some bigger customers, they may
even do themselves. So if you can integrate a more successive function
to the same or into the same system. So that's sort of the long-term
strategy we have and also working with service providers is very, very
important for us.
Ben Bollin
And then my last one. Ken, what are your thoughts on the traditional
campus networking opportunity in the WLAN market? How do you think
about wallet share opportunity and the ability to displace more of the
incumbent there? That's it for me. Thank you.
Ken Xie
That's kind of the thinking we have like over 20, 30 years really.
There's a convergence of networking, traditional networking and network
security. I think SD-WAN is a very, very good example. So the WAF
solution will be more efficient, more secure, and there's a lot of
additional service we can apply to secure SD-WAN, which is whether
offer free or we are not kind of there yet. But same thing for a lot of
other web technology.
And so we feel that's a huge potential. And -- but also doing security
in the networking environment not need a huge company in power, which
has come from ASIC investment we made, which also will take a long time
to see the return of investment, that's what we kind of comment from
day one back 23 years ago. So when we start with we really need to
invest and planning all these kind of long-term convergence of
networking or security together.
So the new ASIC is one example is the fifth generation of our SoC chip,
which also including some of the investments we made in the mine
generation of our content process and seven-generation network
processor together with a lot of multiple CPU. So we continue to
develop technology and eventually will be deployed more broadly beyond
the traditional network security.
Operator
Thank you. I'd like to turn the call back over to Peter Salkowski for
any closing remarks.
Peter Salkowski
Thank you, Valerie. I'd like to thank everyone for joining today's
call. Fortinet will be attending investor conferences hosted by Baird
and Morgan Stanley during the first quarter. A fireside webcast link
will be posted on the Events & Presentations section of Fortinet's
Investor Relations website for the Morgan Stanley conference. If you
have any follow-up questions, please feel free to contact me. Have a
great rest of your day. Thank you.
Operator
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, this does conclude today's conference.
Thank you all for participating. You may now disconnect. Have a great
day.
