UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
FORM 10-K
(Mark One)
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ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 |
For the fiscal year ended December 31, 2018
or
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TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 |
For the transition period from ____________ to ____________
Commission File Number: 001-38664
SVMK Inc.
(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)
Delaware |
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80-0765058 |
(State or other jurisdiction of incorporation or organization) |
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(I.R.S. Employer Identification No.) |
One Curiosity Way
San Mateo, California, 94403
(650) 543-8400
(Address, including zip code, and telephone number, including area code, of Registrant’s principal executive offices)
Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:
Title of each class |
Name of each exchange on which registered |
Common Stock, par value $0.00001 per share |
The Nasdaq Stock Market LLC (The Nasdaq Global Select Market) |
Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(g) of the Act: None
Indicate by check mark if the registrant is a well-known seasoned issuer, as defined in Rule 405 of the Securities Act. YES ☐ NO ☒
Indicate by check mark if the registrant is not required to file reports pursuant to Section 13 or Section 15(d) of the Act. YES ☐ NO ☒
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for the past 90 days. Yes ☒ No ☐
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant has submitted electronically every Interactive Data File required to be submitted pursuant to Rule 405 of Regulation S-T (§232.405 of this chapter) during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to submit such files). Yes ☒ No ☐
Indicate by check mark if disclosure of delinquent filers pursuant to Item 405 of Regulation S-K (§229.405 of this chapter) is not contained herein, and will not be contained, to the best of the registrant’s knowledge, in definitive proxy or information statements incorporated by reference in Part III of this Form 10-K or any amendment to this Form 10-K. ☐
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, a non-accelerated filer, a smaller reporting company or an emerging growth company. See the definitions of “large accelerated filer,” “accelerated filer,” “smaller reporting company” and “emerging growth company” in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act.
Large accelerated filer ☐ |
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Accelerated filer ☐ |
Non-accelerated filer ☒ |
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Smaller reporting company ☐ |
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Emerging growth company ☒ |
If an emerging growth company, indicate by check mark if the registrant has elected not to use the extended transition period for complying with any new or revised financial accounting standards provided pursuant to Section 13(a) of the Exchange Act. ☒
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a shell company (as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act). Yes ☐ No ☒
The aggregate market value of voting and non-voting common stock held by non-affiliates of the registrant, based on the closing price of a share of the registrant’s common stock on December 31, 2018 as reported by the Nasdaq Global Select Market on such date, was approximately $803,964,000. The registrant has elected to use December 31, 2018, which was the last business day of the registrant’s most recently completed fiscal year, as the calculation date because on June 29, 2018 (the last business day of the registrant’s mostly recently completed second fiscal quarter), the registrant was a privately-held company. Shares of the registrant’s common stock held by each executive officer, director and holder of 5% or more of the outstanding common stock have been excluded in that such persons may be deemed to be affiliates. This calculation does not reflect a determination that certain persons are affiliates of the registrant for any other purpose.
As of February 15, 2019, there were 126,644,497 shares of the Company’s common stock outstanding.
DOCUMENTS INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE
Portions of the registrant’s definitive proxy statement for the registrant’s annual meeting of stockholders are incorporated by reference into Part III of this Annual Report on Form 10K to the extent stated herein. Such proxy statement will be filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission within 120 days of the registrant’s fiscal year ended December 31, 2018.
Annual Report on Form 10-K
For the year ended December 31, 2018
TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Item 1. |
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Item 1A. |
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Item 1B. |
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Item 2. |
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Item 3. |
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Item 5. |
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Item 6. |
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Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations |
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Item 7A. |
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Item 8. |
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Item 9. |
Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants on Accounting and Financial Disclosure |
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Item 9A. |
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Item 9B. |
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Item 10. |
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Item 11. |
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Item 12. |
Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management and Related Stockholder Matters |
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Item 13. |
Certain Relationships and Related Transactions, and Director Independence |
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Item 14. |
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Item 15. |
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This Annual Report on Form 10-K contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of the federal securities laws, which statements involve substantial risks and uncertainties. Forward-looking statements generally relate to future events or our future financial or operating performance. In some cases, you can identify forward-looking statements because they contain words such as “may,” “will,” “would,” “should,” “expects,” “plans,” “anticipates,” “could,” “intends,” “target,” “projects,” “contemplates,” “believes,” “estimates,” “predicts,” “potential” or “continue” or the negative of these words or other similar terms or expressions that concern our expectations, strategy, plans or intentions. Forward-looking statements contained in this Annual Report on Form 10-K include, but are not limited to, statements about:
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our ability to attract new users or convert registered users to paying users; |
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our ability to retain paying users; |
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our ability to convert organizations to SurveyMonkey Enterprise customers; |
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our ability to maintain and improve our products; |
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our ability to upsell and cross-sell within our existing customer and user base; |
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our future financial performance, including trends in revenue, costs of revenue, gross profit or gross margin, operating expenses, capital expenditures and paying users; |
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possible harm caused by significant disruption of service or loss or unauthorized access to users’ data; |
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our ability to prevent serious errors or defects in our products; |
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our ability to respond to rapid technological changes; |
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our ability to compete successfully; |
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our ability to protect our brand; |
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the demand for our survey platform or for survey software solutions in general; |
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our expectations and management of future growth; |
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our ability to accelerate growth with the introduction of a significant outbound salesforce; |
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our ability to attract large organizations as users; |
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our ability to attract and retain key personnel and highly qualified personnel; |
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our ability to manage our international expansion; |
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our ability to maintain, protect and enhance our intellectual property; |
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our ability to effectively integrate our products and solutions with others; |
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our ability to achieve or maintain profitability; |
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our ability to manage our outstanding indebtedness; |
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our ability to successfully identify, acquire and integrate companies and assets; |
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our ability to offer high-quality customer support; |
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the increased expenses associated with being a public company; and |
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our anticipated uses of net proceeds from our recent public offering and the concurrent private placement. |
We caution you that the foregoing list may not contain all of the forward-looking statements made in this Annual Report on Form 10-K.
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You should not rely upon forward-looking statements as predictions of future events. We have based the forward-looking statements contained in this Annual Report on Form 10- K primarily on our current expectations and projections about future events and trends that we believe may affect our business, financial condition, results of operations and prospects. The outcome of the events described in these forward-looking statements is subject to risks, uncertainties and other factors described in the section titled “Risk Factors” and elsewhere in this Annual Report on Form 10- K . Moreover, we operate in a very competitive and rapidly changing environment. New risks and uncertainties emerge from time to time and it is not possible for us to predict all risks and uncertainties that could have an impact on the forward-looking statements contained in this Annual Report on Form 10- K . We cannot assure you that the results, events and circum stances reflected in the forward-looking statements will be achieved or occur, and actual results, events or circumstances could differ materially from those described in the forward-looking statements.
The forward-looking statements made in this Annual Report on Form 10-K relate only to events as of the date on which the statements are made. We undertake no obligation to update any forward-looking statements made in this Annual Report on Form 10-K to reflect events or circumstances after the date of this Annual Report on Form 10-K or to reflect new information or the occurrence of unanticipated events, except as required by law. We may not actually achieve the plans, intentions or expectations disclosed in our forward-looking statements and you should not place undue reliance on our forward-looking statements. Our forward-looking statements do not reflect the potential impact of any future acquisitions, mergers, dispositions, joint ventures or investments we may make.
In addition, statements that “we believe” and similar statements reflect our beliefs and opinions on the relevant subject. These statements are based upon information available to us as of the date of this Annual Report on Form 10-K, and while we believe such information forms a reasonable basis for such statements, such information may be limited or incomplete, and our statements should not be read to indicate that we have conducted an exhaustive inquiry into, or review of, all potentially available relevant information. These statements are inherently uncertain and investors are cautioned not to unduly rely upon these statements.
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Overview
SurveyMonkey is a leading global provider of survey software products and purpose-built solutions that enable organizations to engage with their key constituents, including their customers, employees and the markets they serve. Our mission is to power curious individuals and organizations to measure, benchmark and act on the opinions that drive success. Our People Powered Data platform has changed the way individuals and organizations of all sizes collect and analyze feedback by making it easy for anyone to create their own online surveys.
Powering the Curious
Measure
We empower survey creators to measure constituent feedback and have designed our products to optimize the quality of constituent feedback and maximize response rates. Our library of customizable survey templates and certified questions, designed by a team of survey scientists and further enhanced by our machine learning and AI-based analysis of the millions of surveys on our survey platform, facilitates an easy-to-use and methodologically-sound survey creation process.
Benchmark
We enable survey creators to analyze and benchmark the data they have collected. Our benchmarking capabilities allow our customers to assess constituent feedback accurately and compare themselves to industry, geographic and functional baselines as well as their own past performance and internal trends. For example, we have an extensive database of Net Promoter Score®, or NPS®, data that covers everything from small organizations to large corporations across a broad range of industries. This database allows our customers to put their NPS results in context relative to the NPS range for organizations in their industry.
Act
We turn the voices of people into actionable data. Our products enable the filtering and comparing of data by cohort, geography, gender, time period, collection method and more. We help customers weave together data to form a narrative that answers the “why,” which enables them to better understand customer and employee attitudes, predict market appetite and identify meaningful opportunities more quickly. Our products integrate with a customer’s existing system of record, allowing them to implement the insights collected into new and existing workflows. This allows our customers to improve retention and satisfaction of their customers, maximize employee engagement and retention and tailor new products to the demands of prospective customers.
People Powered Data
Our People Powered Data platform enables conversations at scale to deliver impactful customer, employee and market insights. Our survey platform is used to collect and analyze feedback and drive actionable insight for a broad range of use cases, such as collecting NPS data from customers, measuring employee engagement or conducting market research regarding the attributes of a future product offering.
We believe the success of organizations large and small, for profit and non-profit, depends substantially on their ability to understand the expectations of, and respond effectively to, the feedback of their key constituents. Businesses that rely solely on intuition and anecdotal experience or traditional market research frequently struggle to anticipate and respond effectively to the evolving needs of their key constituents. As technology has enabled the collection of data at much greater scale and speed, massive amounts of information have been injected into the decision-making process. Organizations have invested heavily in “Big Data” solutions, which are designed to collect and extract information that provides visibility into the observed behavior of key constituents. However, information from Big Data alone is often insufficient to inform decision making as it fails to capture the human voice. The human voice, captured at scale in real-time and in a structured manner is what we refer to as People Powered Data. Big Data captures the “what.” People Powered Data captures the “why.” Understanding the “why” enables organizations to make better decisions that can drive optimal outcomes.
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Our products are flexible and easy to use, which enables individuals and organizations of all sizes to collect and ana lyze People Powered Data. Our survey platform leverages SurveyMonkey Genius, our proprietary, AI-based survey creation assistant, which uses insights extracted from our massive data set to guide and optimize survey creation. For organizations, we offer Sur veyMonkey Enterprise, which extends our survey platform with enhanced capabilities including managed user accounts, enterprise-grade security, customized company branding, collaboration capabilities and deep integrations with a broad set of leading softwar e applications that enables users to customize and distribute more tailored questions for their target audience. To serve the needs of more advanced users in organizations of all sizes and across all industries, we offer purpose-built solutions to provide enhanced value across three key areas: customers, employees and the markets that these organization serve. These purpose-built solutions incorporate specific workflows, benchmarking data and preconfigured analyses .
Our global customer base is diversified across multiple industries, including financial services, internet, technology, healthcare, media and entertainment, consumer goods and retail, transportation and logistics, government agencies, manufacturing, energy, education, professional services and non-profit organizations. We have over 17.5 million active users, of which 646,727 are paying users in more than 345,000 organizational domains, including paying users in 98% of the Fortune 500. No customer represented more than 1% of our revenue in any of the years ended December 31, 2018, 2017 and 2016.
We define an active user as someone who has registered an account with us or logged in to their account on our survey platform in the last year. Some of our active users may use our products less frequently than others, which may reduce the opportunities to convert such active users to paying users.
We define an organizational domain as a registered internet domain name held by an organization. As a result, the actual number of unique organizations in which we have paying users may be lower than the number of organizational domains in which we have paying users, because one organization may utilize multiple organizational domains.
Customer 360
Customer 360 is our proprietary, signal-based system fueled by our data science models that analyzes usage patterns and signals across our entire user base to identify opportunities to convert active users to paying users, upsell organizations to enterprise accounts, expand existing enterprise relationships and cross-sell purpose-built solutions. Specifically, Customer 360 monitors signals within an organization, such as total active users, number of surveys deployed, total new accounts in the last six months, total paid subscriptions, type of questions asked and user profiles and surfaces prioritized opportunities for our Sales and Success team.
Our Growth Strategy
The virality of our survey platform is driven by our existing users who introduce SurveyMonkey to new potential users when they send surveys and collaborate with others to share survey results. We continue to focus on retaining our existing paid users, attracting new users, and improving conversion of free users to paid users. We also continue to build new products and enhance the features and functionality of our existing products and solutions. We intend to capitalize on a number of growth opportunities that we believe will accelerate our business, all powered by our massive user base and virality within organizations. Our principal growth strategies include the following:
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Selling SurveyMonkey products directly to enterprise customers : For the year ended December 31, 2018, we generated approximately 12% of our revenue from customers that had an organizational level agreement with us, and as of December 31, 2018, we had over 3,566 customers with organizational level agreements. Our enterprise sales strategy starts with our brand recognition, our existing user base within organizations, and use of our Customer 360 technology to identify opportunities to convert active users to paying users, upsell organizations to enterprise accounts and cross-sell purpose-built solutions. Through this strategy, we expect to accelerate paying user growth and increase both monetization and retention within organizations. |
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Expanding our business in key international markets : For the years ended December 31, 2018, 2017 and 2016, respectively, we generated 36%, 35% and 36% of our revenue from customers outside of the United States, and we see significant opportunity for growth internationally. We are investing in marketing our self-serve products and increasing awareness of our brand, developing a more localized product experience and expanding our international data center presence to improve user experience and website speed, and to provide locally hosted data. We are expanding our international workforce in Dublin, Ireland and Ottawa, Canada, across all of our business functions. |
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Selectively pursuing acquisitions : We believe our large user base, extensive data set, integration capabilities and products provide opportunities for us to drive value-added growth through acquisitions in key areas such as product, market and geographic expansion. |
We offer individuals our basic survey plan at no charge. We also offer multiple tiers of subscriptions to individual paying users and teams which provide basic integrations with third-party applications and other additional features and functionality. For organizations we offer an enterprise-grade version of our survey platform and purpose-built solutions with enhanced collaboration, integration, administration and customization tools.
SurveyMonkey Self-Serve
We offer multiple tiers of subscriptions to individual paying customers—Standard, Advantage and Premier—that provide a range of survey solutions. For the Standard plan, individual users can choose between monthly or annual subscriptions, which they pay for in advance at the beginning of the term. The Standard plan offers access to an unlimited number of questions, up to 1,000 responses, and branding and more complex design capabilities. Advantage and Premier plans are only available on an annual basis and offer unlimited usage, more advanced survey design and distribution capabilities, advanced analytics and team collaboration. Our individual paid plans provide access to a limited set of partner integrations, targeted at individual use cases, as well as 24/7 support. Proprietary survey templates, SurveyMonkey Genius and analytical tools allow for our customers to collect response and analyze them quickly.
We also offer SurveyMonkey Teams versions of our Advantage and Premier subscription plans. SurveyMonkey Teams’ plans are oriented for smaller groups of users who want to collaborate with others. In addition to the features available in individual Advantage and Premier plans, the SurveyMonkey Teams’ versions provide collaboration capabilities around sharing, commenting and analyzing surveys and a shared asset library for team users.
For organizations, we offer SurveyMonkey Enterprise and a suite of purpose-built solutions for customers, employees, the markets they serve and applicants:
SurveyMonkey Enterprise
We have built additional enterprise-grade capabilities into our survey platform to support organizations of all sizes and with varying requirements. Pricing for SurveyMonkey Enterprise deployments are negotiated with organizations based on functionality and number of users. Our enterprise-grade capabilities include:
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Enterprise-Grade Security: We provide centralized data ownership and access management across accounts with encryption and compliance with key standards. Our security protocols have passed the requirements of large, global customers across industries, including the defense, financial services and healthcare sectors. |
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Managed Accounts and Users: Our survey platform enables organizations to centrally manage users and teams. Within an organization, all survey accounts can be consolidated under a single corporate identity to centralize billing, administration and access management. |
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Collaboration: Users can create and share surveys between and within departments allowing others to review, add comments and make edits. Teams gain access to a shared library that ensures consistent organizational branding and survey methodology across all team member accounts, utilizing the images, themes, style preferences and templates that fit an organization’s preferences. |
Purpose-Built Solutions
We have developed purpose-built feedback solutions on top of SurveyMonkey Enterprise across the following key areas: customers, employees, markets that our customers serve and application management. Revenue from these purpose-built solutions is generated by subscription or on a transactional basis, depending on the product.
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SurveyMonkey CX: SurveyMonkey CX is our customer experience NPS solution that transforms customer feedback into actionable insights using built-in benchmarking, data analytics, key driver analysis and follow-up action items. |
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TechValidate: TechValidate is our marketing content automation solution. TechValidate collects customer feedback at scale, automatically converting it into validated marketing content, including statistics, charts, testimonials and case studies. |
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SurveyMonkey Engage: SurveyMonkey Engage is our employee engagement offering, which measures employee experiences within an organization to provide managers and human resources teams with actionable data across core engagement factors such as personal engagement, job satisfaction, team dynamics and purpose alignment. |
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SurveyMonkey Audience: SurveyMonkey Audience is our market research solution for organizations interested in market research from constituents with whom they do not have a direct relationship. SurveyMonkey Audience enables organizations to quickly gain real-time actionable data from targeted panelists. |
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SurveyMonkey Apply: SurveyMonkey Apply is our application management solution that is primarily used by educational institutions and non-profits seeking to allocate scholarships and grants. |
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Wufoo: Wufoo is our easy-to-use form builder that helps users create web and mobile forms, collect file uploads and receive online payments. |
Our Technology Infrastructure and Operations
Our products are centered on innovation in the following areas:
Scalable Data Collection: Data can be collected via iOS and Android mobile apps, web browsers, personalized emails and social media or collaboration platforms such as Facebook Messenger and Slack. In addition, data collection can be programmatically embedded and customized to sit within a customer’s web site or mobile app and popup invitations. Additionally, we offer access via SurveyMonkey Anywhere, our offline data collection mode and via QR codes.
Data Storage and Analysis : Our architecture allows us to collect data in multiple geographic locales. Our primary data center is a Tier-5 platinum rated facility in Las Vegas, Nevada. We operate a secondary data center in San Jose, California. In addition, we enable certain accounts to store their SurveyMonkey data in other geographic regions via Amazon Web Services.
Reliability: We have designed our products to be highly available under peak global load conditions. We replicate customer data across our two data centers to enable redundancy and backup.
Security: Our survey platform can be connected to enterprise identity management systems such as Microsoft Active Directory and OKTA and can be configured to enable administrators to automate the management of licenses and system access.
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Integration into Customer Systems and Processes: Companies can integrate SurveyMonkey into their systems and processes by using our prebuilt connectors, using one of many third-party applications built on our survey platform, or via a custom integration using our open APIs.
We are focused on research and development to enhance our survey platform, develop new products and features, and improve our infrastructure.
Sales, Marketing and Customer Success
We believe the SurveyMonkey brand is globally synonymous with collecting feedback. We benefit from the virality of our platform, where survey creators increase our exposure organically among the respondents to their surveys, and every person who takes a survey is a potential future customer. In addition, our marketing function supports our sales effort targeted at organizations with an existing organic adoption of our survey platform.
We also conduct direct response marketing and engage and reactivate users through communication channels such as in-product notifications, demand generation campaigns, mobile notifications and lifecycle email marketing. We also create brand awareness through search engine optimization, content marketing, social media marketing, public relations and earned media with partners.
We augment our self-serve offering with a direct sales team focused on leveraging our existing base of active users. We use Customer 360 to gather insights into our user base to upsell organizations to SurveyMonkey Enterprise and cross-sell purpose-built solutions within organizations.
Our survey platform is designed to be easy to adopt and use without the need for support. For those who want support, we have a robust knowledge base and online help center, localized in 16 languages. We also have a dedicated team of experienced and highly-trained survey scientists whose mission is to provide our customers with the methodology they need to collect high quality, unbiased information and to increase survey response rates.
Customer 360 also assists our customer success team by estimating the likelihood of churn as well as potential customer adoption challenges.
Employees
As of December 31, 2018, we had a total of 857 employees. None of our U.S. employees are represented by a labor union or are the subject of a collective bargaining agreement. We have not experienced any work stoppages and we believe that our relationship with our employees is good.
Competition
Competitors to our People Powered Data platform include the enterprise feedback offerings of SAP/Qualtrics, form tools such as Google Forms, Microsoft Forms and Typeform, solutions for specific use cases such as Medallia for customer experience, and full-service market research firms such as Nielsen. We also compete with offline methods of feedback collection, such as pen-and-paper surveys and telephone surveys. We believe that the principal competitive factors in our markets include the following:
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ease of use and deployment of applications; |
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quality and timeliness of data and insight generation; |
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product features, quality and functionality; |
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volume of data for benchmarking, data science models and AI and machine learning applications; |
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pricing, total cost of ownership and visibility into cost over time; |
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brand awareness and reputation; |
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breadth of customer base and level of user adoption; |
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ability to integrate with other applications and systems; |
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security, reliability and scalability across organizations; |
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flexibility to cover a wide breadth of use cases globally; |
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ability to enable collaboration within teams and across different business lines; |
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customer experience; and |
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vision for the market and product innovation. |
Some of our competitors may have significantly greater financial, marketing and product development resources than we have, larger sales and marketing budgets and resources, broader distribution or established relationships, or lower labor and research and development costs. Our competitors may devote greater resources and time on developing and testing products and solutions, undertake more extensive marketing campaigns, adopt more aggressive pricing policies or otherwise develop more commercially successful products and solutions than we do.
Regulatory Matters
We are subject to a variety of laws in the United States and abroad, including laws regarding privacy, data protection, data security, data retention, consumer protection, accessibility, sending and storing of electronic messages, human resource services, employment and labor laws, workplace safety, intellectual property and the provision of online payment services, including credit card processing, consumer protection laws, anti-bribery and anti-corruption laws, import and export controls, federal securities laws and tax regulations, which are continuously evolving and developing. We also have privacy-related terms and guidelines for third-party developers to create applications that connect to our products. We participate in and have certified our compliance with the EU-U.S. and Swiss-U.S. Privacy Shield Frameworks and Principles with respect to personal data that we collect.
Intellectual Property
We rely on trademarks, patents, copyrights, trade secrets, license agreements, intellectual property assignment agreements, confidentiality procedures, non-disclosure agreements and employee non-disclosure and invention assignment agreements to establish and protect our proprietary rights. Though we rely in part upon these legal and contractual protections, we believe that factors such as the skills and ingenuity of our employees and the functionality and frequent enhancements to our solutions are larger contributors to our success in the marketplace.
As of December 31, 2018, we had five issued patents and five pending patent applications in the United States. These patents and patent applications seek to protect our proprietary inventions relevant to our business.
Corporate Information
SVMK Inc. was incorporated in October 2011 as a Delaware corporation and is the successor to operations originally begun in 1999. Our principal executive offices are located at One Curiosity Way, San Mateo, California 94403, and our telephone number is (650) 543-8400. Our website address is www.surveymonkey.com.
SurveyMonkey, the SurveyMonkey logo, the Goldie logo, People Powered Data, SVMK and our other registered or common law trademarks, service marks or trade names appearing in this prospectus are the property of SurveyMonkey Inc., our wholly-owned subsidiary. NPS is a registered trademark of Bain & Company, Inc., Fred Reichheld and Satmetrix Systems, Inc., and other trademarks and trade names referred to in this Annual Report on Form 10-K are the property of their respective owners.
Available Information
Our Annual Reports on Form 10-K, Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q, Current Reports on Form 8-K, and amendments to reports filed pursuant to Sections 13(a) and 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, or the “Exchange Act”, are filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, or the “SEC”. We are subject to the informational requirements of the Exchange Act and files or furnishes reports, proxy statements and other information with the SEC. Such reports and other information filed by us with the SEC are available free of charge at investor.surveymonkey.com/financial-information/sec-filings when such reports are available on the SEC’s website. The SEC maintains an internet site that contains reports, proxy and information statements, and other information regarding issuers that file electronically with the SEC at www.sec.gov.
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We periodically provide other material information for investors on our corporate website, www.surveymonkey.com, the investor relat ions page on our corporate website, investor.surveymonkey.com, press releases, public conference calls and public webcasts. We use these channels, as well as social media, to communicate with investors and the public about us , our offerings and other issues. It is possible that the information we post on social media could be deemed to be material information. Therefore, we encourage investors, the media and others interested in us to review the information we post on the U.S. soci al media channels listed on the investor relations page on our website. Any updates to the list of disclosure channels through which we will announce information will be posted on the investor relations page on our website. The information contained on the websites referenced in this Annual Report on Form 10-K is not incorporated by reference into this filing. Further, our references to website URLs in this Annual Report on Form 10-K are intended to be inactive textual references only.
We are an emerging growth company within the meaning of the Jumpstart Our Business Startups Act of 2012, or the JOBS Act, and, as such, we have elected to comply with certain reduced public company reporting requirements. We will remain an emerging growth company until the earliest to occur of (i) the last day of the fiscal year in which we have more than $1.07 billion in annual revenue; (ii) the date we qualify as a “large accelerated filer,” with at least $700 million of equity securities held by non-affiliates; (iii) the date on which we have issued, in any three-year period, more than $1.0 billion in non-convertible debt securities; and (iv) the last day of the fiscal year ending after the fifth anniversary of the completion of our initial public offering, or IPO.
Investing in our common stock involves a high degree of risk. You should carefully consider the risks and uncertainties described below, together with all of the other information in this Annual Report on Form 10-K, including the section titled “Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations” and our consolidated financial statements and related notes, before making a decision to invest in our common stock. Our business, results of operations, financial condition or prospects could also be harmed by risks and uncertainties that are not presently known to us or that we currently believe are not material. If any of the risks actually occur, our business, results of operations and financial condition could be adversely affected. In that event, the market price of our common stock could decline, and you could lose all or part of your investment.
Risks Related to Our Business
Our business depends on our ability to retain and upgrade customers, and any decline in renewals or upgrades could adversely affect our business, results of operations and financial condition.
Our business depends upon our ability to maintain and expand our relationships with our users. Customers can choose between monthly or annual subscriptions, and customers are not obligated to and may not renew their paid subscriptions after their existing plans expire. As a result, we cannot assure that customers will renew their paid plans utilizing the same tier of our products and solutions or upgrade to our premium products or solutions. Renewals of paid plans may decline or fluctuate because of several factors, such as dissatisfaction with our products, solutions or support, a user no longer having a need for our products or the perception that competitive products are better or less expensive options. As our customer base continues to grow, even if our customer retention rates remain the same on a percentage basis, the absolute number of customers we lose each month will increase. We must continually add new customers to replace customers whose accounts are cancelled or terminated and to grow our business beyond our current user base, which may involve significantly higher marketing expenses than we currently anticipate.
We invest in new features and improvements to our product functionality as well as targeted marketing campaigns to drive conversion of unpaid users to paying users. Individual users often bring us into their organization for business purposes, and from there we seek to establish an organizational relationship through the deployment of SurveyMonkey Enterprise. As we scale within organizations, we seek to further grow the business relationship by cross-selling purpose-built solutions. If our customers fail to renew or cancel their subscriptions, or if we fail to upgrade our customers to higher tier individual subscriptions or to SurveyMonkey Enterprise, our business, results of operation and financial condition may be harmed. Although it is important to our business that our customers renew their subscriptions after their existing plans expire and that we expand our commercial relationships with our customers, given the volume of our customers, we do not track the retention rates of our individual active users. However, we do track dollar-based net retention rate information on an aggregate basis.
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Additionally, many of our users initially register to use our free basic survey product. We strive to demonstrate the value of our products to our registered users, thereby encouraging them to convert to paying users through end-of-survey marketing. W e have over 17.5 million active users, of which 646,727 are currently paying users . The actual number of unique users may be lower than we report as one person could cou nt as multiple active users or paying users. For example, if an individual paying user also had a designated seat in a SurveyMonkey Enterprise deployment, we would count that person as two paying users. As a result, we may have fewer unique users that we m ay be able to convert, upsell or cross-sell. Our inability to determine the number of our unique users is a limitation in the data that we measure and may adversely affect our understanding of certain aspects of our business and make it more challenging to manage our business. A majority of our active users may never convert to a paying user, and if we are unable to convert free users to paying users, our business, results of operations and f inancial condition could suffer .
In the event that we are unable to attract and retain customers, convert unpaid users to customers, and develop and expand relationships with organizational customers, our business, results of operations and financial condition may be adversely affected.
Our revenue growth rate has fluctuated in recent periods and may slow in the future.
We have a history of delivering revenue growth and positive cash flow from operations. However, our rates of revenue growth have slowed and fluctuated, and may continue to slow in the future. Many factors may contribute to declines in our growth rates, including higher market penetration, increased competition, slowing demand for our survey platform, a failure by us to continue capitalizing on growth opportunities and the maturation of our business, among others. You should not rely on the revenue growth of any prior quarterly or annual period as an indication of our future performance. If our growth rates decline, investors’ perceptions of our business and the trading price of our common stock could be adversely affected.
Our business depends on a strong and trusted brand, and any failure to maintain, protect and enhance our brand would hurt our ability to retain or expand our customer and user base, our market share and our ability to attract and retain employees.
We have developed a strong and trusted brand that we believe has contributed significantly to the success of our business. We believe that enhancing and maintaining awareness of the SurveyMonkey brand in a cost-effective manner is critical to our goal of achieving widespread acceptance of our existing and future products, attracting new customers and attracting and retaining top talent. Furthermore, we receive a high degree of media coverage around the world and we believe that the importance of brand recognition will increase as competition in our industry increases. Successful promotion of our brand will depend largely on the effectiveness of our marketing and media partnership efforts and the effectiveness and affordability of our products for our target customer demographic. Such brand promotion activities may not yield increased revenue and, even if they do, any revenue increases may not offset the expenses we incur to promote our brand. Unfavorable publicity regarding, for example, our privacy practices, terms of service, service quality, litigation, regulatory activity or the perception of inaccurate poll data from properly or improperly drafted surveys by third parties using our survey platform, the actions of our partners and customers or the actions of other companies that provide similar products and solutions to us, could adversely affect our reputation, brand, the size and engagement of our user base and our ability to attract and retain users. If we fail to promote and maintain our brand successfully, or if we incur substantial expenses in an unsuccessful attempt to promote and maintain our brand, we may lose our existing customers to our competitors or be unable to attract new customers or employees, which could harm our business, results of operations and financial condition.
One of our marketing strategies is to offer a limited free version of our product on a self-serve basis, and we may not be able to realize the benefits of this strategy.
We offer a free basic survey product in order to promote our brand, build awareness and fuel the virality of our survey platform. Most users never convert from our free basic version to a paid version of our product. Our marketing strategy also depends in part on persuading users who use the free version of our product to become a paying user, either as an individual or to convince organizational decision makers to purchase and deploy SurveyMonkey Enterprise. To the extent that these users do not become, or lead others to become, paying users, we will not realize the intended benefits of this marketing strategy, and our business, results of operations and financial condition may be harmed.
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If we are unable to continue to increase adoption of our products through our self-serve model, our business, results of operations and financial condition may be adversely affected.
Historically, our business model has been driven by organic adoption and viral growth, particularly from conversion of our free users to paid, with many of our new individual paying users coming to us directly through our website or organic online search. We are currently expanding our salesforce, which has historically been limited. Although we believe our business model can continue to scale without a significantly larger salesforce, our self-serve model may not continue to be as effective as we anticipate, which may impede our future growth.
As a substantial portion of our sales efforts are increasingly targeted at winning SurveyMonkey Enterprise customers, our sales cycle may become lengthier and more expensive, we may encounter greater pricing pressure and our customers may be displeased with our customer support, all of which could harm our business and results of operations.
As a substantial portion of our sales efforts are increasingly targeted at prospective customers for SurveyMonkey Enterprise, we face greater costs, longer sales cycles and less predictability in the completion of some of our sales. In this market, the customer’s decision to use our products may be an enterprise-wide decision, in which case these types of sales require us to provide greater levels of customer education to familiarize these customers regarding the uses, features and benefits of our products and purpose-built solutions, as well as education regarding security and governance, privacy and data protection laws and regulations, especially for those customers in more heavily-regulated industries. In addition, larger enterprises may demand more support services and features, which puts additional pressure on our support and success organizations to satisfy the increased support required for our customers. Further, as we continue to grow our operations and support our global user base, we need to be able to continue to provide efficient customer support that meets our customers’ needs globally at scale. As a result of these factors, these sales opportunities may require us to devote greater sales support and professional survey platform resources to paying users in order to familiarize these new customers with our value proposition, or require us to hire additional support personnel, which could increase our costs and sales cycle and divert our own sales and professional services resources to a smaller number of larger customers. We rely on Customer 360, our proprietary, signal-based system fueled by our data science models, to identify and target prospective customers, but there is no guarantee that this system will correctly identify the correct opportunities. These significant expenditures in time and money may not result in a sale. Our strategy is to work with third parties to increase the breadth of capability and depth of capacity for delivery of our products and solutions to our customers. If a customer is not satisfied with the quality or interoperability of our products and solutions with their own IT environment, we could incur additional costs to address the situation, which could adversely affect our margins. Moreover, any customer dissatisfaction with our products and solutions, or a failure to maintain high-quality customer support, or a market perception that we do not maintain high-quality customer support, could damage our ability to encourage broader adoption of our products by that customer and positive recommendations to other potential users. In addition, any negative publicity resulting from such situations, regardless of its accuracy, may further damage our business by affecting our ability to compete for new business with current and prospective customers.
We may not succeed in building a significant and effective salesforce, and we may fail to manage our sales channels effectively.
While a growing portion of our revenue in recent periods has been derived from our sales efforts, we are investing in building and developing a larger and more robust salesforce, particularly internationally, where our brand is less well known, but we may not be as successful as we anticipate. Our limited experience selling directly to small, medium and large organizations through our salesforce may impede our future growth. Further, our ability to manage a larger direct salesforce is uncertain. Identifying and recruiting additional qualified sales personnel and training them requires significant time, expense and attention. In addition, many organizations undertake a significant evaluation and negotiation process, which can lengthen our sales cycle, and some organizations demand more specialized features on our survey platform. We may spend substantial time, effort and money on sales efforts without any assurance that our efforts will produce any sales. As a result, our sales efforts may lead to greater unpredictability in our business, results of operations and financial condition.
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Additionally, we have global partners who broaden the scope of our self-serve SurveyMonkey Audience solution by providing access to additional panelists around the world. Our partners are generally in nonexclusive agreements with us, are not subject to minimum obligations and may be terminated at any time without cause. I f we fail to manage our sales efforts successfully or they otherwise fail to perform as we anticipate, it could reduce our sales and increase our expenses, as well as w eaken our competitive position.
Any significant disruption in service or security on our websites or in our systems could result in a loss of users, damage to our reputation and harm to our business.
Our brand, reputation and ability to attract and retain users and customers depend in part upon the reliable performance of our network infrastructure, websites, other systems and those of third-party service providers. We have experienced, and may in the future experience, interruptions in these systems, including server failures that temporarily impair or disable the performance of our websites due to a variety of factors, such as infrastructure changes, human or software errors, capacity constraints and denial of service or fraud or security attacks. In some instances, we may not be able to rectify or even identify the cause or causes of these site performance problems within an acceptable period of time. As our solutions become more complex and our user traffic increases, we expect that it will become increasingly challenging to maintain and improve the performance of our products and solutions, especially during peak usage times. If our products are unavailable to users or fail to function as quickly as users expect, it could result in reduced customer satisfaction and reduced attractiveness of our survey platform to customers. This in turn could lead to decreased sales to new customers, harm our ability to retain existing customers and the issuance of service credits or refunds, any of which could hurt our business, results of operations and financial condition.
We expect to continue to make significant investments to build new products and enhance the features and functionality of our existing products and solutions. To the extent that we do not effectively address capacity constraints, upgrade our systems and data centers as needed and continually develop our technology and network architecture to accommodate actual and anticipated changes in technology, our business and operating results may be harmed. Further, even if we are able to upgrade our systems, any such expansion will be expensive and complex, requiring management time and attention. Additionally, problems with the reliability or security of our systems, including unauthorized access to or improper use of the information of our users, could harm our reputation and negatively affect our business. Affected users could also initiate legal or regulatory action against us in connection with such incidents, which could cause us to incur significant expense and liability or result in orders or consent decrees forcing us to modify our business practices.
We may not timely and effectively scale and adapt our existing technology and network infrastructure to rapid technological changes, enhance our existing products and solutions or develop new products.
The industry in which we compete is characterized by rapid technological change and frequent introductions of new products and solutions, as well as changing customer needs, requirements and preferences. Our ability to grow our user base and increase revenue from existing customers will depend heavily on our ability to enhance the features and functionality of our products and solutions, introduce new products and solutions, anticipate and respond effectively to these changes on a timely basis and interoperate across an increasing range of devices, operating systems and third-party applications. The success of our products depends on our continued investment in our research and development organization to increase the accessibility, ease-of-use and interoperability of our existing solutions and the development of features and functionality that users may require.
The introduction of new products and solutions by competitors or the development of entirely new technologies to replace existing offerings could make our survey platform and other solutions obsolete or adversely affect our business, results of operations and financial condition. We may experience difficulties with software development, design or marketing that could delay or prevent our development, introduction or implementation of our product experiences, features or capabilities. We have in the past experienced delays in our internally planned release dates of new features and capabilities, and we cannot assure you that new product experiences, features or capabilities will be released according to schedule. If users do not widely adopt our survey platform or purchase our products and services, we may not be able to realize a return on our investment. If we do not accurately anticipate user demand or we are unable to develop, license or acquire new features and capabilities on a timely and cost-effective basis, or if such enhancements do not achieve market acceptance, it could result in adverse publicity, loss of revenue or market acceptance or claims by users brought against us, each of which could have a material and adverse effect on our reputation, business, results of operations and financial condition.
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If our security measures are compromised, or if our websites are subject to attacks that degrade or deny the ability of users and respondents to access our products, or if our customer or respondent data are compromised, users may curtail or stop use of our survey platform.
Our products collect, process, store, share, disclose and use customers’ and respondents’ information and communications, some of which may be private. We also work with third-party vendors to process credit card payments by our customers and are thus subject to payment card association operating rules, and rely on the availability of our third-party payment processors. We are vulnerable to software bugs, computer viruses, break-ins, phishing attacks, employee errors or malfeasance, attempts to overload our servers with denial-of-service or other attacks and similar disruptions from unauthorized use of our computer systems, any of which could lead to interruptions, delays or website shutdowns, causing loss of critical data or the unauthorized disclosure or use of personally identifiable or confidential information. It is virtually impossible for us to entirely mitigate the risk of breaches of our survey platform or other security incidents affecting our products, internal systems, networks or data. In addition, the functionality of our products may be disrupted by third parties, including disgruntled employees, former employees or contractors. The security measures we use internally, and have integrated into our products, which are designed to detect unauthorized activity and prevent or minimize security breaches, may not function as expected or may not be sufficient to protect against certain attacks. If we experience compromises to our security that result in site performance or availability problems, the complete shutdown of our websites or the actual or perceived loss or unauthorized disclosure or use of confidential information, such as credit card information, personal health information, trade secrets or other proprietary information, our users may be harmed or lose trust and confidence in us and choose to decrease the use of our products, which would cause us to suffer reputational and financial harm.
In addition, we may be subject to regulatory investigations or litigation in connection with a security breach or related issues, and we could also be liable to third parties for these types of breaches. Such litigation, regulatory investigations and our technical activities intended to prevent future security breaches are likely to require additional management resources and expenditures. If our security measures fail to protect this information adequately or we fail to comply with other rules and regulations, such as the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, the General Data Protection Regulation, or GDPR, the EU-U.S. and Swiss-U.S. Privacy Shield Framework and Principles or applicable credit card association operating rules, we could be liable to both our users for their losses, as well as the vendors under our agreements with them, we could be subject to fines and higher transaction fees, we could face regulatory action, and our users and vendors could end their relationships with us, any of which could harm our business, results of operations and financial condition.
Our internal systems are exposed to the same cybersecurity risks and consequences of a breach as our customers and other enterprises. However, since our business is focused on providing reliably secure products to our customers, we believe that an actual or perceived breach of, or security incident affecting, our internal networks, systems or data could be especially detrimental to our reputation, customer confidence in our products and solutions and our business.
Our industry is intensely competitive, and competitors may succeed in reducing our sales.
Our products face intense competition from many different companies, including but not limited to:
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form providers, such as Google Forms, Microsoft Forms and Typeform; |
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licensed enterprise feedback software, such as SAP/Qualtrics; |
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software for specific use cases, such as Medallia for customer experience; and |
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full service market research firms, such as Nielsen. |
These competitors vary in size, and many have significantly greater financial, marketing and product development resources than we have, larger sales and marketing budgets and resources, broader distribution or established relationships or lower labor and research and development costs. We also compete with offline methods of information collection, such as pen-and-paper surveys, telephone surveys, forms and applications, and less-automated methods such as email. Our competitors may devote greater resources and time on developing and testing products and solutions, undertake more extensive marketing campaigns and partnerships, adopt more aggressive pricing policies or otherwise develop more commercially successful products and solutions than we do. Our competitors may have preexisting relationships which required significant upfront investment by the
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customer, and these customers may prefer to continue existing and established relationships rather than adopt our survey platform. We ca nnot assure that we will be able to increase or maintain the large user base that we currently enjoy.
There are relatively low barriers to entry into our business. As a result, we are likely to face additional and intense competition from new entrants into the market in the future. There can be no assurance that existing or future competitors will not develop or offer products that provide significant performance, price, speed, creative or other advantages over those offered by us, and this could have an adverse effect on our business. We also operate in a highly fragmented market, and consolidation of our competitors or customers may also adversely affect our business. In addition, historically, our business has enjoyed relatively high margins and growth, which may attract new competition into our markets, including competition from companies employing alternate business models. Loss of existing or future market share to new competitors and increased price competition could substantially harm our business, results of operations and financial condition.
Our business, results of operations and financial condition may fluctuate on a quarterly and annual basis, which may result in a decline in our stock price if such fluctuations result in a failure to meet the expectations of securities analysts or investors.
Our operating results have in the past and could in the future vary significantly from quarter-to-quarter and year-to-year and may fail to match our past performance, our projections or the expectations of securities analysts because of a variety of factors, many of which are outside of our control. Any of these events could cause the market price of our common stock to fluctuate. Factors that may contribute to the variability of our operating results include:
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our ability to attract new users to our survey platform; |
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our ability to convert users of our free basic survey product to paying users; |
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our ability to retain paying users; |
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our ability to prevent account sharing and software piracy; |
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our ability to maintain and improve our products; |
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shifts in the way customers, respondents and users access our websites and products from personal computers to mobile devices; |
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the effectiveness of our marketing campaigns, including old strategies that may cease to be effective and the failure of new efforts; |
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disruptions or outages in the availability of our websites or products, actual or perceived breaches of privacy and compromises of our customer or respondent data; |
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changes in our pricing policies or those of our competitors; |
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our ability to increase sales of our products and solutions to new customers and expand sales of additional products and solutions to our existing customers; |
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the size and seasonal variability of our customers’ research and marketing and budgets; |
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the extent to which existing customers renew their agreements with us and the timing and terms of those renewals; |
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general industry, market and macroeconomic conditions; |
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the timing and cost of investing in our technology infrastructure, product initiatives, facilities and international expansion may be greater than we anticipate; |
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our needs related to facilities and data centers may change over time and vary from our original forecasts, and the value of the property that we lease or own may fluctuate; |
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expenses related to hiring, incentivizing and retaining employees; |
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the timing and costs of expanding our sales organization and delays or inability in achieving expected productivity; |
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the entrance of new competitors in our market whether by established companies or the entrance of new companies; |
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currency exchange rate fluctuations; |
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our ability to integrate acquisitions and realize the expected benefit of such acquisitions in a timely manner or at all; |
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changes in the price of our subscription plans; and |
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changing tax laws and regulations. |
Our historical operating results may not be indicative of our future operating results. As our revenue growth rate has slowed, the cyclicality and seasonality in our business have become more pronounced, and we expect that to continue. This has, and will, cause our operating results to fluctuate. Further, our customers were required to renew their subscriptions at a higher price point in 2017 in connection with our changes to our individual user plans. If we do not continue to increase the price of our subscription plans in the future, or if we lose customers as a result of price increases, our revenue could be adversely affected. In addition, global economic concerns continue to create uncertainty and unpredictability and add risk to our future outlook. An economic downturn in any particular region in which we do business or globally could result in reductions in sales of our products, decreased renewals of existing arrangements and other adverse effects that could harm our business, results of operations and financial condition.
We have substantial indebtedness and lease obligations, which reduce our capability to withstand adverse developments or business conditions.
We have incurred substantial indebtedness, and as of December 31, 2018, our total aggregate indebtedness was approximately $219.5 million of principal outstanding. We also have, and will continue to have, significant lease obligations. As of December 31, 2018, our total aggregate obligations under our long-term operating and financing leases was $133.2 million. Our payments on our outstanding indebtedness and lease obligations are significant in relation to our revenue and cash flow, which exposes us to significant risk in the event of downturns in our businesses (whether through competitive pressures or otherwise), our industry or the economy generally, since our cash flows would decrease but our required payments under our indebtedness and lease obligations would not. Economic downturns may impact our ability to comply with the covenants and restrictions in our credit facilities and agreements governing our other indebtedness and lease obligations and may impact our ability to pay or refinance our indebtedness or lease obligations as they come due, which would adversely affect our business, results of operations and financial condition.
Our overall leverage and the terms of our financing arrangements could also:
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make it more difficult for us to satisfy obligations under our outstanding indebtedness; |
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limit our ability to obtain additional financing in the future for working capital, capital expenditures or acquisitions; |
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limit our ability to refinance our indebtedness on terms acceptable to us or at all; |
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limit our ability to adapt to changing market conditions; |
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restrict us from making strategic acquisitions or cause us to make non-strategic divestitures; |
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require us to dedicate a significant portion of our cash flow from operations to paying the principal and interest on our indebtedness, thereby limiting the availability of our cash flow to fund future capital expenditures, working capital and other corporate purposes; |
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limit our flexibility in planning for, or reacting to, changes in our business and in our industry generally; and |
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place us at a competitive disadvantage compared with competitors that have a less significant debt burden. |
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We may be required to delay recognition of some of our revenue, which may harm our financial results in any given period.
We may be required to delay recognition of revenue for a significant period of time after entering into an agreement due to a variety of factors, including, among other things, whether:
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the transaction involves both current products and products that are under development; |
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the customer requires significant modifications, configurations or complex interfaces that could delay delivery or acceptance of our products; |
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the transaction involves acceptance criteria or other terms that may delay revenue recognition; or |
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the transaction involves performance milestones or payment terms that depend upon contingencies. |
Because of these factors and other specific revenue recognition requirements under GAAP, we must have very precise terms in our contracts to recognize revenue when we initially provide access to our survey platform or other products. Although we strive to enter into agreements that meet the criteria under GAAP for current revenue recognition on delivered performance obligations, our agreements are often subject to negotiation and revision based on the demands of our customers. The final terms of our agreements sometimes result in deferred revenue recognition, which may adversely affect our financial results in any given period. In addition, more customers may require extended payment terms, shorter term contracts or alternative licensing arrangements that could reduce the amount of revenue we recognize upon delivery of our other products and could adversely affect our short-term financial results.
Furthermore, the presentation of our financial results requires us to make estimates and assumptions that may affect revenue recognition. In some instances, we could reasonably use different estimates and assumptions, and changes in estimates are likely to occur from period to period. Accordingly, actual results could differ significantly from our estimates.
Our results of operations may not immediately reflect downturns or upturns in sales because we recognize revenue from our users over the term of their paid subscriptions with us.
We recognize revenue from paid subscriptions to our products and solutions over the terms of the subscription period. Paying users can choose between monthly or annual subscriptions, and customers of SurveyMonkey Enterprise make a minimum one-year subscription commitment and are increasingly purchasing multi-year subscriptions. Amounts that have been billed are initially recorded as deferred revenue until the revenue is recognized. As a result, a large portion of our revenue for each quarter reflects deferred revenue from paid subscriptions entered into during previous quarters, and downturns or upturns in subscription sales, or renewals and potential changes in our pricing policies may not be reflected in our results of operations until later periods. Our paid subscription model also makes it difficult for us to rapidly increase our revenue through additional sales in any period, as paid subscription revenue from new users is recognized over the applicable subscription term.
If we fail to effectively manage our growth, our business and results of operations could be harmed.
The scope and complexity of our business have also increased significantly. The growth and expansion of our business creates significant challenges for our management, operational and financial resources. In the event of continued growth of our operations or in the number of our third-party relationships, our information technology systems and our internal controls and procedures may not be adequate to support our operations. To effectively manage our growth, we must continue to improve our operational, financial and management processes and systems and to effectively expand, train and manage our employee base. As our organization continues to grow and we are required to implement more complex organizational management structures, we may find it increasingly difficult to maintain the benefits of our corporate culture, including our ability to quickly develop and launch new and innovative products and solutions. This could negatively affect our business performance.
We continue to experience growth in our headcount and operations, which will continue to place significant demands on our management and our operational and financial infrastructure. As of December 31, 2018, approximately 35% of our employees had been with us for less than one year and approximately 20% for more than one year but less than two years. As we continue to grow, we must effectively integrate, develop and motivate a large number of new employees, and we must maintain the beneficial aspects of our corporate culture. To attract top talent, we have had to offer, and believe we will need to continue to offer, highly competitive
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compensation packages before we can validate the productivity of those empl oyees. In addition, fluctuations in the price of our common stock may make it more difficult or costly to use equity compensation to motivate, incentivize and retain our employees. We face significant competition for talent from other internet, software an d high-growth companies, which include both publicly traded and privately-held companies. The risks of over-hiring, especially given overall macroeconomic risks, or over-compensating employees and the challenges of integrating a growing employee base into our corporate culture are exacerbated by our international expansion. Additionally, because of our growth, we have expanded our operating and financing lease obligations and purchase commitments, which have increased our expenses. We may not be able to hir e new employees quickly enough to meet our needs. If we fail to effectively manage our hiring needs and successfully integrate our new hires, our efficiency and ability to meet our forecasts and our employee morale, productivity and retention could suffer, and our business, results of operations and financial condition could be adversely affected.
Additionally, if we do not effectively manage the growth of our business and operations, the quality of our products and solutions could suffer, which could negatively affect our brand, results of operations and overall business. Further, we have made changes in the past, and will likely make changes in the future, to our products that our customers may not like, find useful or agree with. We may also decide to discontinue certain features, products or solutions or charge for certain features, products or solutions that are currently free or increase fees for any of our features, products or solutions. If users are unhappy with these changes, they may decrease their usage of our products or stop using them generally, and in the past we have experienced a decrease in our number of paying users as a result of pricing changes. In addition, they may choose to take other types of action against us, such as organizing petitions or boycotts focused on our company, our website or our products and services, filing claims with the government or other regulatory bodies or filing lawsuits against us. Any of these actions could negatively impact our growth and brand, which would harm our business.
Our corporate culture has contributed to our success, and if we cannot maintain this culture as we grow, we could lose the innovation, creativity and teamwork fostered by our culture and our business may be harmed.
We have worked to develop a strong culture around our team, which we refer to as the troop, and which is built on four key pillars of celebrating curiosity, maintaining a collaborative and inclusive work environment, focusing on individual well-being and seeking to positively influence our industry and community. We believe that our culture has been and will continue to be a critical contributor to our success. We expect to continue to hire aggressively as we expand, and we believe our corporate culture has been crucial in our success and our ability to attract highly skilled personnel. If we do not continue to develop our corporate culture or maintain and preserve our core values as we grow and evolve both in the United States and internationally, we may be unable to foster the innovation, curiosity, creativity, focus on execution, teamwork and the facilitation of critical knowledge transfer and knowledge sharing we believe we need to support our growth. Our anticipated headcount growth and our transition from a private company to a public company may result in a change to our corporate culture, which could harm our business.
We depend on our talent to grow and operate our business, and if we are unable to hire, integrate, develop, motivate and retain our personnel, we may not be able to grow effectively.
Our future success depends, in part, on our ability to continue to identify, hire, integrate, develop, motivate and retain top talent, including senior management, engineers, designers, product managers, sales representatives and customer support representatives. Our ability to execute efficiently is dependent upon contributions from all of our employees, in particular our senior management team. As we continue to grow, we cannot guarantee we will continue to attract or retain the personnel we need to maintain our competitive position. In addition to hiring new employees, we must continue to focus on retaining our best talent. Competition for these resources, particularly for engineers, is intense, and competition for the facilities to house our employees is also intense, especially in the San Francisco Bay Area where our headquarters is located. We may need to invest significant amounts of cash and equity for new and existing employees and we may never realize returns on these investments, and we also are investing heavily in our facilities. If we are not able to effectively increase and retain our talent, our ability to achieve our strategic objectives will be adversely impacted, and our business will be harmed. The loss of one or more of our key employees, and any failure to have in place and execute an effective succession plan for key executives, could seriously harm our business. Employees may be more likely to leave us if the shares they own or the shares underlying their equity incentive awards have significantly appreciated or significantly reduced in value. Additionally, if our senior management team, including any new hires that we may make, fails to work together effectively and to execute on our plans and strategies on a timely basis, our business could be harmed.
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In addition, our future also depends on the continued contributions of our senior management team and other key personnel, each of whom would be difficult to replace. Although we have entered into employment agreements or offer letters wit h our key employees, these agreements have no specific duration and constitute at-will employment, and we do not maintain key person life insurance for any employee. In addition, from time to time, there may be changes in our senior management team that ma y be disruptive to our business. If our senior management team, including any new hires that we may make, fails to work together effectively and to execute our plans and strategies on a timely basis, our business, results of operations and financial condit ion could be harmed.
Our products and solutions and internal systems rely on software that is highly technical, and if it contains undetected errors, our business could be adversely affected.
Our products and solutions and internal systems rely on software that is highly technical and complex. In addition, our products and solutions and internal systems depend on the ability of our software to store, retrieve, process and manage immense amounts of data. Our software has contained, and may now or in the future contain, undetected errors, bugs or vulnerabilities. Some errors in our software may only be discovered after the code has been released for external or internal use. Errors or other design defects within our software may result in a negative experience for our users, delay product introductions or enhancements or result in measurement or other errors. We also rely on third-party software that may contain errors or bugs. Any actual or perceived errors, failures, vulnerabilities, bugs or defects discovered in our software or third-party software we use could result in damage to our reputation, cause a reduction in revenue or delay in market acceptance of our products, require us to issue refunds to our customers or expose us to claims for damages, cause us to lose existing users or make it more difficult to attract new users, divert our development resources or require us to make extensive changes to our survey platform, any of which could adversely affect our business, results of operations and financial condition. The costs incurred in correcting such defects or errors may be substantial and could harm our results of operations and financial condition. Moreover, the harm to our reputation and legal liability related to such errors or defects may be substantial and could harm our business.
We depend on our infrastructure and third-party data centers, and any disruption in the operation of these facilities or failure to renew the services could impair the delivery of our products and solutions and adversely affect our business.
We currently deploy our products and solutions and serve all of our users using a combination of our own custom-built infrastructure that we lease and operate in co-location facilities and third-party data center services such as Amazon Web Services. While we typically control and have access to the servers we operate in co-location facilities and the components of our custom-built infrastructure that are located in those co-location facilities, we control neither the operation of these facilities nor our third-party service providers. Furthermore, we have no physical access or control over the services provided by Amazon Web Services. Consequently, we may be subject to service disruptions as well as failures to provide adequate services for reasons that are outside our direct control.
Data center leases and agreements with the providers of data center services expire at various times. The owners of these data centers and providers of these data center services may have no obligation to renew their agreements with us on commercially reasonable terms or at all. Problems faced by data centers, with our third-party data center service providers, with the telecommunications network providers with whom we or they contract, or with the systems by which our telecommunications providers allocate capacity among their users, including us, could adversely affect the experience of our users. Our third-party data center operators could decide to close their facilities or cease providing services without adequate notice. In addition, any financial difficulties, such as bankruptcy, faced by our third-party data centers operators or any of the service providers with whom we or they contract may have negative effects on our business, the nature and extent of which are difficult to predict. In addition, these facilities may be located in areas prone to natural disasters and may experience events such as earthquakes, floods, fires, power loss, telecommunication failures and similar events. They may also be subject to break-ins, sabotage, intentional acts of vandalism and similar misconduct. Any damage to, or failure of, our systems generally, or those of the third-party providers, could result in interruptions in use of our products that may reduce our revenue, cause us to issue credits or pay penalties, cause customers to terminate their services with us and adversely affect our ability to attract new customers and retain existing customers.
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If the data centers and service providers that we use are unable t o keep up with our growing needs for capacity, or if we are unable to renew our agreements with data centers and service providers on commercially reasonable terms, we may be required to transfer servers or content to new data centers or engage new service providers, and we may incur significant costs and possible service interruption in connection with doing so. In addition, if we do not accurately plan for our data center capacity requirements and we experience significant strains on our data center capac ity, we may experience delays and additional expenses in arranging new data centers, and our users could experience service outages that may subject us to financial liabilities, result in customer losses and harm our business. Any changes in third-party se rvice levels at data centers or any real or perceived errors, defects, disruptions or other performance problems with our products and solutions could harm our reputation and may result in damage to, or loss or compromise of, our users’ content. Interrupti ons in our products and solutions might, among other things, reduce our revenue, cause us to issue refunds to users, subject us to potential liability, harm our reputation or our ability to reta in customers.
We collect, process, store, share, disclose and use personal information and other data, which subjects us to governmental regulations and other legal obligations related to privacy and security, and our actual or perceived failure to comply with such obligations could harm our business.
We collect, process, store, share, disclose and use information from and about our customers, respondents and users, including personal information and other data. There are numerous laws around the world regarding privacy and security, including laws regarding the collection, processing, storage, sharing, disclosure, use and security of personal information and other data from and about our customers, respondents and users. The scope of these laws is changing, subject to differing interpretations, may be costly to comply with, and may be inconsistent among countries and jurisdictions or conflict with other rules.
We strive to comply with applicable laws, policies and legal obligations relating to privacy and data protection and are subject to the terms of our privacy policies and privacy-related obligations to third parties. However, these obligations may be interpreted and applied in new ways and/or in a manner that is inconsistent from one jurisdiction to another and may conflict with other rules or our practices. Data privacy and security are active areas, and new laws and regulations are likely to be enacted.
Any failure or perceived failure by us to comply with our privacy policies, our privacy-related obligations to customers, respondents, users or other third parties, our data disclosure and consent obligations or our privacy or security-related legal obligations, or any compromise of security that results in the unauthorized disclosure, transfer or use of personal or other information, which may include personally identifiable information or other data, may result in governmental enforcement actions, litigation or public statements critical of us by consumer advocacy groups, competitors, the media or others and could cause our users to lose trust in us, which could have an adverse effect on our business. Additionally, if third parties we work with, such as customers, partners, vendors or developers, violate applicable laws, our policies or other privacy or security-related obligations, such violations may also put our users’ information at risk and could in turn have an adverse effect on our business. Governmental agencies may also request or take member or customer data for national security or informational purposes, and also can make data requests in connection with criminal or civil investigations or other matters, which could harm our reputation and our business. Additionally, our compliance with the laws of one jurisdiction may be in contravention to laws or regulations that we are subject to in other jurisdictions
In addition, there has been increased uncertainty around the legality of various mechanisms for personal data transfers from the European Union to the United States, which may have a significant impact on the transfer of data from the European Union to U.S. companies, including us. For example, we may have to require some of our vendors who process personal data to take on additional privacy and security obligations, and some may refuse, causing us to incur potential disruption and expense related to our business processes. If our policies and practices, or those of our vendors, are, or are perceived to be, insufficient or if our users and customers have concerns regarding the transfer of data from the European Union to the United States, we could be subject to enforcement actions or investigations by the Federal Trade Commission, individual EU Data Protection Authorities or lawsuits by private parties, use of our products could decline and our business could be negatively impacted. There is also uncertainty as to whether the certain legal mechanisms for the lawful transfer of data from the European Union to the United States will withstand legal challenges. If the mechanisms on which we rely for the transfer of data are found to be invalid, our business would be substantially impacted, as key agreements may need to be renegotiated, customers may lose confidence in our ability to transfer data legally from the European
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Union to the United States and we may be subject to enforcement actions or investigation s by the Federal Trade Commission or EU Data Protection Authorities.
Public scrutiny of internet privacy and security issues may result in increased regulation and different industry standards, which could deter or prevent us from providing our products to our customers, thereby harming our business.
The regulatory framework for privacy and security issues worldwide is evolving and is likely to remain in flux for the foreseeable future. Various government and consumer agencies have also called for new regulation and changes in industry practices. Practices regarding the registration, collection, processing, storage, sharing, disclosure, use and security of personal and other information by companies offering an online service like our survey platform and other solutions have recently come under increased public scrutiny.
For example, the European Union has enacted GDPR, which became effective in May 2018. GDPR requires greater compliance efforts for companies with users and operations in the European Union and provides for fines of up to the greater of €20,000,000 or 4% of global annual revenue for noncompliance.
In the United States, the federal government and many state governments have reviewed and are reviewing the need for greater regulation of the collection, processing, storage, sharing, disclosure, use and security of information concerning consumer behavior with respect to online services, including regulations aimed at restricting certain targeted advertising practices and collection and use of data from mobile devices. This review may result in new laws or the promulgation of new regulations or guidelines. For example, the State of California and other states have passed laws relating to disclosure of companies’ practices with regard to Do-Not-Track signals from internet browsers, the ability to delete information of minors and new data breach notification requirements. California has also adopted privacy guidelines with respect to mobile applications and recently enacted legislation, the California Consumer Privacy Act, or CCPA, that will, among other things, require covered companies to provide new disclosures to California consumers, and afford such consumers new abilities to opt-out of certain sales of personal information, when it goes into effect on January 1, 2020. The CCPA was amended on September 23, 2018, but without substantial modification of its fundamental obligations. Legislators have stated that they intend to propose further amendments to the CCPA before it goes into effect, and it remains unclear what, if any, modifications will be made to this legislation or how it will be interpreted. We cannot yet predict the impact of the CCPA on our business or operations, but it may require us to modify our data processing practices and policies and to incur substantial costs and expenses in an effort to comply.
In June 2016, the United Kingdom voted to leave the European Union, commonly referred to as “Brexit,” which could also lead to further legislative and regulatory changes. In March 2017, the United Kingdom began the process to leave the European Union by April 2019. A Data Protection Bill that substantially implements GDPR has been enacted, effective in May 2018. It remains unclear, however, how United Kingdom data protection laws or regulations will develop in the medium to longer term and how data transfers to and from the United Kingdom will be regulated.
Outside the European Union and the United States, a number of countries have adopted or are considering privacy laws and regulations that may result in greater compliance efforts. In addition, government agencies and regulators have reviewed, are reviewing and will continue to review the personal data practices of certain online companies. If we are unable to comply with any such reviews or decrees that result in recommendations or binding changes, or if the recommended changes result in degradation of our products, our business could be harmed.
Our business, including our ability to operate and expand internationally, could be adversely affected if legislation or regulations are adopted, interpreted or implemented in a manner that is inconsistent with our current business practices and that require changes to these practices, the design of our websites, mobile applications, survey platform, solutions, features or our privacy policies. In particular, the success of our business has been, and we expect will continue to be, driven by our ability to responsibly gather and use data from data subjects and help our customers collect and analyze data from survey respondents. Therefore, our business could be harmed by any significant change to applicable laws, regulations or industry standards or practices regarding the storage, use or disclosure of data our customers or respondents share with us, or regarding the manner in which the express or implied consent of consumers for such collection, analysis and disclosure is obtained. Such changes may require us to modify our survey platform, features and other products, possibly in a material manner, and may limit our ability to develop new products, solutions and features that make use of the data that we collect.
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Our business is subject to a variety of U.S. and foreign laws, many of which are unsettled and still developing and which could subject us to claims or otherwise harm our business.
We are subject to a variety of laws in the United States and abroad, including laws regarding privacy, data protection, data security, data retention and consumer protection, accessibility, sending and storing of electronic messages (and related traffic data where applicable), human resource services, employment and labor laws, workplace safety, intellectual property and the provision of online payment services, including credit card processing, consumer protection laws, anti-bribery and anti-corruption laws, import and export controls, federal securities laws and tax regulations, which are continuously evolving and developing. The scope and interpretation of the laws and other obligations that are or may be applicable to us, our vendors or partners or certain groups of our users are often uncertain and may be conflicting, particularly laws and other obligations outside of the United States. For example, laws relating to the liability of providers of online services for activities of their users and other third parties are currently being tested by a number of claims, including actions based on invasion of privacy and other torts, unfair competition, copyright and trademark infringement and other theories based on the nature and content of the materials searched, the advertisements posted or the content provided by users.
In addition, regulatory authorities around the world are considering a number of legislative and regulatory proposals concerning privacy, spam, data storage, data protection, content regulation, cybersecurity, government access to personal information and other matters that may be applicable to our business. Compliance with these laws may require substantial investment or may provide technical challenges for our business. More countries are enacting and enforcing laws related to the appropriateness of content and enforcing those and other laws by blocking access to services that are found to be out of compliance. It is also likely that as our business grows, evolves and an increasing portion of our business shifts to mobile and our solutions are used in a greater number of countries and additional groups, we will become subject to laws and regulations in additional jurisdictions. Users of our site and our solutions could also abuse or misuse our survey platform and other products in ways that violate laws or cause damage to our business. It is difficult to predict how existing laws will be applied to our business and whether we will become subject to new laws or legal obligations that will impact our business.
If we are not able to comply with these laws or other legal obligations, or if we or our vendors or users become liable under these laws or legal obligations, or if our products or services are suspended or blocked, we could be directly harmed, and we may be forced to implement new measures to reduce exposure to this liability. This may require us to expend substantial resources or to discontinue certain solutions, which would negatively affect our business, results of operations and financial condition. We could also be subject to investigations, enforcement actions and sanctions, mandatory changes to our products and solutions, disgorgement of profits, fines and damages, civil and criminal penalties or injunctions, claims for damages, termination of contracts and loss of intellectual property rights. In addition, the increased attention focused upon liability issues as a result of lawsuits and legislative proposals could harm our reputation or otherwise impact the growth of our business. Any costs incurred as a result of this potential liability could harm our business, results of operations and financial condition.
We are subject to export and import control laws and regulations that could impair our ability to compete in international markets or subject us to liability if we violate such laws and regulations.
We are subject to U.S. export controls and sanctions regulations that prohibit the shipment or provision of certain products and solutions to certain countries, governments and persons targeted by U.S. sanctions. While we take precautions to prevent our products and services from being exported or used in violation of these laws, including implementing IP address blocking, we cannot guarantee that the precautions we take will prevent violations of export control and sanctions regulations. In March 2018, we discovered that three of our paying users were located in Crimea and had avoided our screening measures by incorrectly identifying their location. Although these accounts have been cancelled, this use of platform was likely in violation of U.S. sanctions regulations. In June 2018, we filed a Voluntary Self-Disclosure with the Office of Foreign Assets Control, or OFAC, concerning these potential violations. In July 2018, we received a cautionary letter from OFAC stating that it would not pursue any penalties at this time. If in the future we are found to be in violation of U.S. sanctions or export control laws, it could result in substantial fines and penalties for us and for the individuals working for us.
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In addition, various countries regulate the import and export of certain encryption and other technology, including import and export permitting and licensing requirements, and have enacted laws that could limit our ability to distribute our products or could limit our users’ ability to access our survey platform in those countries. Changes in our products, or future changes in export and import regulations, may prevent our users with international operations from deploying our products globally or, in some cases, prevent the export or import of our products to certain countries, governments or persons altogether. Any change in export or import regulations, economic sanctions or related legislation or change in the countries, governments, persons or technologies targeted by suc h regulations, could result in decreased use of our products by, or in our decreased ability to export or sell subscriptions to our products to, existing or potential users with international operations. Any decreased use of our survey platform or limitati on on our ability to export or sell our products would likely adversely affect our business, results of oper ations and financial condition.
Failure to comply with anti-bribery, anti-corruption and anti-money laundering laws could subject us to penalties and other adverse consequences.
We are subject to the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act of 1977, as amended, or the FCPA, the U.K. Bribery Act and other anti-corruption, anti-bribery and anti-money laundering laws in various jurisdictions both domestic and abroad. These laws generally prohibit us and our employees from improperly influencing government officials or commercial parties in order to obtain or retain business, direct business to any person or gain any advantage. The FCPA, U.K. Bribery Act and similar applicable anti-bribery and anti-corruption laws also prohibit our third-party business partners, representatives and agents from engaging in corruption and bribery. We may be held liable for the acts of our third-party business partners, representatives and agents. To that end, in addition to our own salesforce, we leverage third parties to sell our products and conduct our business abroad. We and our third-party business partners, representatives and agents may have direct or indirect interactions with officials and employees of government agencies or state-owned or affiliated entities and may be held liable for the corrupt or other illegal activities of these third-party business partners and intermediaries, our employees, representatives, contractors, channel partners and agents, even if we do not explicitly authorize such activities. While we have policies and procedure to address compliance with such laws, we cannot assure you that our employees and agents will not take actions in violation of our policies or applicable law, for which we may be ultimately held responsible. Any violation of the FCPA or other applicable anti-bribery, anti-corruption laws and anti-money laundering laws could result in whistleblower complaints, adverse media coverage, investigations, imposition of significant legal fees, loss of export privileges, severe criminal or civil sanctions or suspension or debarment from U.S. government contracts, substantial diversion of management’s attention, drop in stock price or overall adverse consequences to our business, all of which may have an adverse effect on our reputation, business, results of operations and financial condition.
Our international operations involve risks that could increase our expenses, adversely affect our operating results and require increased time and attention of our management.
We derive a portion of our revenue from customers located outside of the United States and we have significant operations outside of the United States, including engineering, sales and customer support. We plan to expand our international operations, but such expansion is contingent upon the financial performance of our existing international operations as well as our identification of growth opportunities.
Our international operations are subject to risks in addition to those our domestic operations face, including:
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potential loss of proprietary information due to misappropriation or laws that may be less protective of our intellectual property rights than U.S. laws or that may not be adequately enforced; |
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requirements of foreign laws and other governmental controls, including privacy, data protection and transfer, trade and labor restrictions and related laws that reduce the flexibility of our business operations; |
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local business and cultural factors that differ from our normal standards and practices, including business practices that we are prohibited from engaging in by the FCPA, U.K. Bribery Act and other anti-corruption laws and regulations; |
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restrictions on our ability to repatriate cash from our international subsidiaries or to exchange cash in international subsidiaries into cash available for use in the United States; |
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limitations on future growth or inability to maintain current levels of revenue from international sales if we do not invest sufficiently in our international operations, or execute properly on such investments; |
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longer payment cycles for sales in foreign countries and difficulties in collecting accounts receivable; |
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difficulties in staffing, managing and operating our international operations, including difficulties related to administering our equity incentive plan in some foreign countries; |
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difficulties in coordinating the activities of our geographically dispersed and culturally diverse operations; |
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seasonal reductions in business activity in the summer months in Europe and in other periods in other countries; |
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costs and delays associated with developing software and providing support in multiple languages; and |
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political unrest, war or terrorism, or regional natural disasters, particularly in areas in which we have facilities. |
The level of corporate tax from sales to our non-U.S. customers is generally less than the level of tax from sales to our U.S. customers. This benefit is contingent upon existing tax regulations in the U.S and in the countries in which our international operations are located. Future changes in domestic or international tax regulations could adversely affect our ability to continue to realize these tax benefits.
If currency exchange rates fluctuate substantially in the future, the results of our operations, which are reported in U.S. dollars, could be adversely affected.
We conduct our business in over 190 countries and territories around the world and a significant portion of our transactions outside of the United States are denominated in foreign currencies. As we continue to expand our international operations, we become more exposed to the effects of fluctuations in currency exchange rates. We incur expenses for employee compensation and other operating expenses at our non-U.S. locations in the local currency, and accept payment from customers in currencies other than the U.S. dollar. Since we conduct business in currencies other than U.S. dollars but report our financial results in U.S. dollars, we face exposure to fluctuations in currency exchange rates and any increase in the value of the U.S. dollar against these foreign currencies could cause our revenue to decline relative to our costs, thereby decreasing our operating margins. Exchange rate fluctuations between the U.S. dollar and other currencies could have a material impact on our profitability and hinder our ability to predict our future results and earnings. For example, because we recognize revenue over time, exchange rate fluctuations at one point in time may have a negative impact in future quarters. There can be no assurance that we will be successful in managing our exposure to currency exchange rate risks, which may adversely affect our business, results of operations and financial condition. Additionally, because we conduct business in currencies other than U.S. dollars, but report our results of operations in U.S. dollars, we also face remeasurement exposure to fluctuations in currency exchange rates, which could hinder our ability to predict our future results and earnings and could materially impact our results of operations. From time to time, we may enter into foreign currency derivative contracts to reduce the risk that our cash flows and earnings will be adversely affected by foreign currency exchange rate fluctuations. During the years ended December 31, 2018, 2017 and 2016, we did not have any material amount of derivative financial instruments.
Expansion into international markets is important for our growth, and as we expand internationally, we will face additional business, political, regulatory, operational, financial and economic risks, any of which could increase our costs and hinder such growth.
Continuing to expand our business to attract users in countries other than the United States is a critical element of our business strategy. An important part of targeting international markets is increasing our brand awareness and developing offerings that are localized and customized for the users in those markets. We have a limited operating history as a company outside of the United States. We expect to continue to devote significant resources to international expansion through acquisitions and partnerships, the establishment of additional offices and increasing our foreign language offerings. Our ability to expand our business and to attract talented employees and users in an increasing number of international markets will require considerable management attention and
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resources and is subject to the particular challenges of supporting a rapidly growing business in an environment of multiple languages, cultures, customs, legal systems, alternative dispute resolution systems, regulatory systems and commercial i nfrastructures. Expanding our international focus may subject us to risks that we have not faced before or increase risks that we currently face, including but not limited to risks associated with recruiting and retaining talented and capable management an d employees in foreign countries; challenges caused by distance, time zone, language and cultural differences; developing and customizing products and solutions that appeal to the tastes and preferences of users in international markets; competition from l ocal survey providers with significant market share in those markets and with a better understanding of user preferences; reliance on third parties and partnerships to provide product support and services that we do not resource directly outside of the Uni ted States, such as panelists for SurveyMonkey Audience; protecting and enforcing our intellectual property rights; the inability to extend proprietary rights in our brand, content or technology into new jurisdictions; compliance with applicable foreign la ws and regulations, including privacy laws and laws relating to content; credit risk and higher levels of payment fraud; currency exchange rate fluctuations; protectionist laws and business practices that favor local businesses in some countries; foreign t ax consequences; foreign exchange controls or U.S. tax restrictions that might restrict or prevent us from repatriating income earned in countries outside of the United States; political, economic and social instability; higher costs associated with doing business internationally; export or import regulations; and trade and tariff restrictions.
Entering new international markets will be expensive, our ability to successfully gain market acceptance in any particular market is uncertain and the distraction of our senior management team could harm our business, results of operation and financial condition.
We derive, and expect to continue to derive, a substantial majority of our revenue from a limited number of software products.
We derive, and expect to continue to derive, a substantial majority of our revenue from our paid individual and enterprise subscription offerings to our survey platform. As such, the market acceptance of our survey platform is critical to our success. Demand for subscription access to our survey platform and for our other products and solutions is affected by a number of factors, many of which are beyond our control, such as continued market acceptance of our survey platform by customers for existing and new use cases, the timing of development and release of new products, solutions, features and functionality that are lower cost alternatives introduced by us or our competitors, technological changes and developments within the markets we serve and growth or contraction in our addressable markets. If we are unable to continue to meet customer demands or to achieve more widespread market acceptance of our survey platform, our business, results of operations and financial condition could be harmed.
If internet search engines’ methodologies are modified or our search result page rankings decline for other reasons, use and engagement by users could decline.
We depend in part on various internet search engines to direct a significant portion of our traffic to our website. Similarly, we depend on providers of mobile application “store fronts” to allow users to locate and download our mobile applications that enable our product. Our ability to maintain the number of visitors directed to our website and users of our survey platform is not entirely within our control. Our competitors’ search engine optimization, or SEO, efforts may result in their websites receiving a higher search engine results page ranking than ours, or internet search engines could revise their methodologies in an attempt to improve their search results, which could adversely affect the placement of our search result page ranking. If search engine companies modify their search algorithms in ways that are detrimental to our new user growth or in ways that make it harder for our users to use our website, if we fail to successfully manage changes in SEO and social media traffic or if our competitors’ SEO efforts are more successful than ours, overall growth in our user base could slow, user engagement could decrease and we could lose existing users. These modifications may be prompted by search engine companies entering the online survey market or aligning with competitors. Additionally, our competitors may adopt search engine marketing tactics such as bidding on our terms in order to drive up our costs. This could make it more expensive to acquire new customers using our current marketing methods. Our website has experienced fluctuations in search engine results page rankings in the past, and we anticipate similar fluctuations in the future. Any reduction in the number of users directed to our websites would harm our business, results of operations and financial condition.
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Our business depends on continued and unimpeded access to the internet and mobile networks by us and our users on personal computers and mobile devices.
Our survey platform and solutions depend on the ability of our customers, respondents and users to access our products through their personal computers and mobile devices. Currently, this access is provided by companies that have significant market power in the broadband and internet access marketplace, including incumbent telephone companies, cable companies, mobile communications companies and government-owned service providers, any of whom could take actions that degrade, disrupt or increase the cost of user access to our products, which would, in turn, negatively impact our business. In addition, internet or network access could be disrupted by other third parties. Further, the adoption of any laws or regulations that adversely affect the growth, popularity or use of the internet and mobile networks, including laws limiting internet neutrality, could decrease the demand for our paid subscription offerings or the usage of our survey platform and increase our cost of doing business.
If we are unable to effectively operate on mobile devices, our business could be adversely affected.
Our customers and respondents are increasingly accessing our products on mobile devices. We are devoting valuable resources to solutions related to monetization of mobile usage, and cannot assure you that these solutions will be successful. If the mobile solutions we have developed do not meet the needs of current prospective customers or respondents, or if our solutions are difficult to access, they may reduce their usage of our products or cease using our products altogether and our business could suffer. Additionally, we are dependent on the interoperability of our products with popular mobile operating systems, networks and standards that we do not control, such as Android and iOS operating systems, and any changes in such systems and terms of service that degrade our solutions’ functionality or give preferential treatment to competitive products could adversely affect traffic and monetization on mobile devices. We may not be successful in maintaining and developing relationships with key participants in the mobile industry or in developing products that operate effectively with these technologies, systems, networks or standards. Each manufacturer or distributor may establish unique technical standards for its devices, and our products may not work or be easily accessible or viewable on these devices as a result. Some manufacturers may also elect not to include our products on their devices, or we may have difficulty preparing or loading our applications in app stores. As new devices and products are continually being released, it is difficult to predict the challenges we may encounter in developing versions of our solutions for use on these alternative devices. If we are unable to successfully implement monetization strategies for our solutions on mobile devices, or if these strategies are not as successful as our offerings for personal computers or if we incur excessive expenses in this effort, our business, results of operations and financial condition would be negatively affected.
If we are unable to successfully implement monetization strategies for our solutions on mobile devices, or these strategies are not as successful as our offerings for personal computers, or if we incur excessive expenses in this effort, our financial performance and ability to grow revenue would be negatively affected.
Failure to protect or enforce our intellectual property rights could harm our business and results of operations.
We regard the protection of our trade secrets, copyrights, trademarks, trade dress, databases, domain names and patents as critical to our success. We strive to protect our intellectual property rights by relying on federal, state and common law rights and other rights provided under foreign laws. These laws are subject to change at any time and could further restrict our ability to protect our intellectual property rights. In addition, the existing laws of certain foreign countries in which we operate may not protect our intellectual property rights to the same extent as do the laws of the United States. We also have a practice of entering into confidentiality and invention assignment agreements with our employees and contractors, and often enter into confidentiality agreements with parties with whom we conduct business in order to limit access to, and disclosure and use of, our proprietary information. In addition, from time to time we make our technology available to others under license agreements, including open source license agreements. However, these contractual arrangements and the other steps we have taken to protect our intellectual property rights may not prevent the misappropriation of our proprietary information, infringement of our intellectual property rights or deter independent development of similar or competing technologies by others and may not provide an adequate remedy in the event of such misappropriation or infringement.
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Obtaining and maintaining effective intellectual property rights is expensive, including the costs of defending our rights. We are seeking to protect certain of our intellectual property rights through filing applications for copyrights, trademarks, patents and domain names in a number of jurisdictions, a process that is expensive and may not be successful in all jurisdictions. Even where we have such rights, they may later be found to be unenforceable or have a limited scope of enforceability. In addition, we may not seek to pursue such protection in every location. In particular, we believe it is important to maintain, protect and enhance our brands. Accordingly, we pursue the registration of domain names and our trademarks and service marks in the United States and in many locations outside of the United States. We ha ve already and may, over time, increase our investment in protecting innovations through investments in patents and similar rights, and this process is expensive and time-consuming.
Litigation may be necessary to enforce our intellectual property rights, protect our proprietary rights or determine the validity and scope of proprietary rights claimed by others. Any litigation of this nature, regardless of outcome or merit, could result in substantial costs and diversion of management and technical resources, any of which could adversely affect our business and results of operations. We may also incur significant costs in enforcing our trademarks against those who attempt to imitate our “SurveyMonkey” brand and other valuable trademarks and service marks.
In addition, we have chosen to make certain of our technology available under open source licenses that allow others to use the technology without payment to us. While we hope to benefit from these activities by having access to others’ useful technology under open source licenses, there is no assurance that we will receive the business benefits we expect.
If we fail to maintain, protect and enhance our intellectual property rights, our business, results of operations and financial condition may be harmed and the market price of our common stock could decline.
We have relationships with third parties to provide, develop and create applications that integrate with our products, and our business could be harmed if we are not able to continue these relationships.
We use software and services licensed and procured from third parties to develop and offer our survey platform and other products. We may need to obtain future licenses and services from third parties to use intellectual property and technology associated with the development of our products, which might not be available to us on acceptable terms or at all. Any loss of the right to use any software or services required for the development and maintenance of our products could result in delays in the provision of our products until equivalent technology is either developed by us or, if available from others, is identified, obtained and integrated, which could harm our business. Any errors or defects in third-party software or services could result in errors or a failure of our products, which could harm our business, results of operations and financial condition.
We also depend on our ecosystem of developers to create applications that will integrate with our survey platform. We offer prebuilt integrations, data portability and single sign-on identity with applications, such as those offered by Salesforce, Marketo, Tableau, Microsoft, and Oracle, as well as open APIs and configurable integrations. Our competitors may be effective in providing incentives to third parties to favor their survey platform, or to prevent or reduce subscriptions to our survey platform. Our reliance on this ecosystem of developers creates certain business risks relating to the quality of the applications built using our application programming interface, including product interruptions of our survey platform from these applications, lack of product support for these applications, our reputation being harmed if the applications do not function as intended and possession of intellectual property rights associated with these applications. We may not have the ability to control or prevent these risks. As a result, issues relating to these applications could adversely affect our brand, reputation, business, results of operations and financial condition.
If we are unsuccessful in establishing or maintaining our relationships with third parties, our ability to compete in the marketplace or to grow our revenue could be impaired and our results of operations may suffer. Even if we are successful, we cannot assure you that these relationships will result in increased customer usage of our products or increased revenue.
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Our use of open source software could negatively affect our ability to offer and sell subscriptions to our products and subject us to possible litigation.
A portion of the technologies we use incorporates open source software, and we may incorporate open source software in the future. Open source software is generally licensed by its authors or other third parties under open source licenses. The terms of many open source licenses have not been interpreted by United States or other courts, and these licenses could be construed in a manner that imposes unanticipated conditions or restrictions on our ability to commercialize our products. These licenses may require us to offer our products that incorporate such open source software for no cost, that we make publicly available source code for modifications or derivative works we create based upon, incorporating or using the open source software, and/or that we license such modifications or derivative works under the terms of the particular open source license. We may face claims from others claiming ownership of open source software or patents related to that software, rights to our intellectual property or breach of open source license terms, including a demand for release of material portions of our source code or otherwise seeking to enforce the terms of the applicable open source license. These claims could result in litigation, which could be costly to defend, require us to purchase a costly license, require us to establish additional specific open source compliance procedures, or require us to devote additional research and development resources to remove open source elements from or otherwise change our solutions, any of which would have a negative effect on our business and results of operations. In addition, if we were to combine our own software with open source software in a certain manner, we could, under certain open source licenses, be required to release the source code of some software that would be valuable to keep as a trade secret and/or not make available for use by others. Any of the foregoing could disrupt and harm our business, results of operations and financial condition.
We may be subject to legal proceedings and litigation, including intellectual property and privacy disputes, which are costly to defend and could materially harm our business and results of operations.
We may be party to lawsuits and legal proceedings in the normal course of business. These matters are often expensive and disruptive to normal business operations. We may face allegations, lawsuits and regulatory inquiries, audits and investigations regarding data privacy, security, labor and employment, consumer protection and intellectual property infringement, including claims related to privacy, patents, publicity, trademarks, copyrights and other rights. We may also face allegations or litigation related to our acquisitions, securities issuances or our business practices, including public disclosures about our business. Litigation and regulatory proceedings, and particularly the patent infringement and class action matters we could face, may be protracted and expensive, and the results are difficult to predict. Certain of these matters include speculative claims for substantial or indeterminate amounts of damages and include claims for injunctive relief. Additionally, our litigation costs could be significant. Adverse outcomes with respect to litigation or any of these legal proceedings may result in significant settlement costs or judgments, penalties and fines, or require us to modify our products or require us to stop offering certain features, all of which could negatively impact our user and revenue growth. We may also become subject to periodic audits, which would likely increase our regulatory compliance costs and may require us to change our business practices, which could negatively impact our revenue growth. Managing legal proceedings, litigation and audits, even if we achieve favorable outcomes, is time-consuming and diverts management’s attention from our business.
The results of regulatory proceedings, litigation, claims and audits cannot be predicted with certainty, and determining reserves for pending litigation and other legal, regulatory and audit matters requires significant judgment. There can be no assurance that our expectations will prove correct, and even if these matters are resolved in our favor or without significant cash settlements, these matters, and the time and resources necessary to litigate or resolve them, could harm our reputation, business, results of operations, financial condition and the market price of our common stock.
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The intended tax efficiency of our corporate structure an d intercompany arrangements depend on the interpretation and application of the tax laws of various jurisdictions and on how we operate our business, and changes to our effective tax rate could adversely impact our results.
Our corporate structure and intercompany arrangements, including the manner in which we develop and use our intellectual property and the transfer pricing of our intercompany transactions, are intended to optimize business efficiency as well as reduce our worldwide effective tax rate. The tax laws of various jurisdictions, including the United States and the other jurisdictions in which we operate, are subject to change, and their application to our international business activities is subject to interpretation and depends on our ability to operate our business in a manner consistent with our corporate structure and intercompany arrangements. The taxing authorities of the jurisdictions in which we operate may challenge our methodologies for valuing developed technology or for transfer pricing on intercompany arrangements, or they may make a determination that the manner in which we operate results in our business not achieving the intended tax consequences. This could increase our worldwide effective tax rate and harm our results of operations and financial condition. Our effective tax rate could be adversely affected by several other factors, many of which are outside of our control, such as: increases in expenses that are not deductible for tax purposes, the tax effects of restructuring charges or purchase accounting for acquisitions, increases in withholding taxes, changes related to our ability to ultimately realize future benefits attributed to our deferred tax assets, including those related to other-than-temporary impairment, and a change in our decision to indefinitely reinvest foreign earnings. Further, we periodically undergo review and audit by both domestic and foreign tax authorities and expect such actions to continue in the future. Any adverse outcome of such a review or audit could have a negative effect on our results of operations and financial condition.
The enactment of legislation implementing changes in the U.S. taxation of international business activities, the adoption of other tax reform policies or changes in tax legislation or policies in jurisdictions outside of the United States could materially impact our results of operations and financial condition.
Changes to U.S. tax laws, including limitations on the ability of taxpayers to claim and utilize foreign tax credits and the deferral of certain tax deductions until earnings outside of the United States are repatriated to the United States, as well as changes to U.S. tax laws that may be enacted in the future, could impact the tax treatment of our foreign earnings and adversely impact our effective tax rate. On December 22, 2017, the legislation commonly referred to as the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017, or the Tax Act, became law, and significantly reformed the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, or the Code. The Tax Act, among other things, includes changes to U.S. federal tax rates and the taxation of foreign earnings, imposes significant additional limitations on the deductibility of interest and the use of net operating losses generated in tax years beginning after December 31, 2017, allows for the immediate expensing of certain capital expenditures and puts into effect the migration from a “worldwide” system of taxation to a territorial system. We continue to examine the impact the Tax Act may have on our business. The Tax Act could have adverse impacts on our business, cash flows, results of operations or financial condition. Due to the expanding scale of our international business activities, any changes in the U.S. or international taxation of such activities may increase our worldwide effective tax rate and harm our business, results of operations and financial condition.
Our operating results may be harmed if we are required to collect sales or other related taxes on subscriptions to our products in jurisdictions where we have not historically done so.
We collect sales, use, value-added and other transaction taxes as part of our subscription agreements in a number of jurisdictions. One or more states or countries may seek to impose incremental or new sales, use, value added or other tax collection obligations on us, including for past sales by us or our resellers and other partners. A successful assertion by a state, country or other jurisdiction that we should have been or should be collecting additional sales, use, value added or other taxes on our products could, among other things, result in substantial tax liabilities, discourage users from utilizing our products or otherwise harm our business, results of operations and financial condition.
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We have a history of net losses, we anticipate increasing expenses in the future and we may not be able to achieve or maintain profitability.
We have incurred net losses on an annual basis since our reincorporation. We incurred net losses of approximately $154.7 million, $24.0 and $76.4 million during the years ended December 31, 2018, 2017 and 2016, respectively and we had an accumulated deficit of approximately $332.3 million as of December 31, 2018. As we strive to grow our business, we expect expenses to increase in the near term, particularly as we continue to make investments to scale our business. For example, we are actively investing in our sales team, and we will need an increasing amount of technical infrastructure to continue to satisfy the needs of our user base. We also expect our research and development expenses to increase as we plan to continue to hire employees for our engineering, product and design teams to support these efforts. In addition, we will incur additional general and administrative expenses to support both our growth as well as our transition to being a publicly traded company. These investments may not result in increased revenue or growth in our business. We may encounter unforeseen or unpredictable factors, including unforeseen operating expenses, complications or delays, which may result in increased costs. Furthermore, it is difficult to predict the size and growth rate of our market, user demand for our survey platform, the entry of competitive survey platforms or other products or the success of existing competitive products and solutions. As a result, we may not achieve or maintain profitability in future periods. If we fail to grow our revenue sufficiently to keep pace with our investments and other expenses, our business, results of operations and financial condition would be adversely affected.
Our ability to use our net operating loss carryforwards and certain other tax attributes may be limited.
As of December 31, 2018, we had $162.2 million of federal and $63.8 million of state net operating loss carryforwards available to reduce future taxable income, which will begin to expire in 2019. As of December 31, 2018, we had federal research and development credits of $14.7 million which will begin to expire in 2032; state research and development credits of $10.8 million which will carryforward indefinitely; and foreign research and development credits of $1.1 million which will begin to expire in 2037. Under Sections 382 and 383 of the Code, if a corporation undergoes an “ownership change,” the corporation’s ability to use its pre-change net operating loss carryforwards and other pre-change attributes, such as research tax credits, to offset its post-change income may be limited. In general, an “ownership change” will occur if there is a cumulative change in our ownership by “5-percent shareholders” that exceeds 50 percentage points over a rolling three-year period. Similar rules may apply under state tax laws. Based on analysis performed, we have concluded that approximately $37.1 million of net operating loss carryforwards from companies we have previously acquired are subject to limitation under Section 382 of the Code. At this time, for our non-acquired net operating losses, we have not completed a study to assess whether an ownership change under Section 382 of the Code has occurred, or whether there have been multiple ownership changes since our formation. We may have experienced various ownership changes, as defined by the Code, as a result of past financing transactions (or other activities), and we may experience ownership changes in the future as a result of subsequent changes in our stock ownership, some of which may be outside of our control. Accordingly, our ability to utilize the aforementioned carryforwards may be limited.
Our business could be disrupted by catastrophic events and man-made problems, such as power disruptions, data security breaches and terrorism.
Our systems are vulnerable to damage or interruption from the occurrence of any catastrophic event, including earthquake, fire, flood, tsunami or other weather event, power loss, telecommunications failure, software or hardware malfunction, cyber-attack, war, terrorist attack or incident of mass violence, which could result in lengthy interruptions in the use of our products. In particular, our U.S. headquarters, certain of the facilities we lease to house our computer and telecommunications equipment and some of the data centers we utilize are located in the San Francisco Bay Area, a region known for seismic activity, and our insurance coverage may not compensate us for losses that may occur in the event of an earthquake or other significant natural disaster. In addition, acts of terrorism, including malicious internet-based activity, could cause disruptions to the Internet or the economy as a whole. Even with our disaster recovery arrangements, use of our products could be interrupted. If our systems were to fail or be negatively impacted as a result of a natural disaster or other event, our ability to deliver products and solutions to our users would be impaired or we could lose critical data. If we are unable to develop adequate plans to ensure that our business functions continue to operate during and after a disaster, and successfully execute on those plans in the event of a disaster or emergency, our business, results of operations, financial condition and reputation would be harmed.
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We have implemented a disaster recovery program that allows us to move website traffic to a backup data center in the event of a catastrophe. This allows us the ability to move traffic in the event of a problem, and the ability to recover in a short period of time. However, to the extent our disaster recovery program does not effectively support the movement of traffic in a timely or complete manner in the event of a catastrophe, our business and results of operations may be harmed.
We do not carry business interruption insurance sufficient to compensate us for the potentially significant losses, including the potential harm to our business, results of operations and financial condition that may result from interruptions in our product use as a result of system failures.
We may require additional capital to support business growth, and this capital might not be available on acceptable terms, if at all.
We intend to continue to make investments to support our business growth and may require additional funds to respond to business challenges, including the need to develop new features, products and solutions, or enhance our existing survey platform, improve our operating infrastructure or acquire complementary businesses and technologies. Accordingly, we have engaged and may continue to engage in equity or debt financings to secure additional funds. If we raise additional funds through future issuances of equity or convertible debt securities, our existing stockholders could suffer significant dilution, and any new equity securities we issue could have rights, preferences and privileges superior to those of holders of our common stock. Any debt financing we secure in the future could involve restrictive covenants relating to our capital raising activities and other financial and operational matters, which may make it more difficult for us to obtain additional capital and to pursue business opportunities, including potential acquisitions. We may not be able to obtain additional financing on terms favorable to us, if at all. If we are unable to obtain adequate financing or financing on terms satisfactory to us when we require it, our ability to continue to support our business growth and to respond to business challenges could be significantly impaired, and our business may be harmed.
Acquisitions and investments could result in operating difficulties, dilution and other harmful consequences that may adversely impact our business, results of operations and financial condition.
In the past, we have acquired a number of companies including MarketTools (Zoomerang), Fluidware and TechValidate, and we may in the future make acquisitions to add employees, complementary companies, products, solutions, technologies or revenue. These transactions could be material to our results of operations and financial condition. We also expect to continue to evaluate and enter into discussions regarding a wide array of potential strategic transactions. The identification of suitable acquisition candidates can be difficult, time-consuming and costly, and we may not be able to complete acquisitions on favorable terms, if at all. The process of integrating an acquired company, business or technology has created, and will continue to create, unforeseen operating difficulties and expenditures. The areas where we face risks include:
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loss of key employees of the acquired company and other challenges associated with integrating new employees into our culture, as well as reputational harm if integration is not successful; |
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diversion of management time and focus from operating our business to addressing acquisition integration challenges; |
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implementation or remediation of controls, procedures and policies at the acquired company; |
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integration of the acquired company’s accounting, human resource and other administrative systems, and coordination of product, engineering and sales and marketing function; |
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assumption of contractual obligations that contain terms that are not beneficial to us, require us to license or waive intellectual property rights or increase our risk for liability; |
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failure to successfully further develop the acquired technology or realize our intended business strategy; |
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failure to find commercial success with the products or services of the acquired company; |
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difficulty of transitioning the acquired technology onto our existing survey platforms and maintaining the security standards for such technology consistent with our other products and solutions; |
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failure to successfully onboard customers or maintain brand quality of acquired companies; |
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failure to generate the expected financial results related to an acquisition on a timely manner or at all; and |
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failure to accurately forecast the impact of an acquisition transaction. |
These risks or other problems encountered in connection with our acquisitions and investments could cause us to fail to realize the anticipated benefits of such acquisitions or investments, incur unanticipated liabilities and adversely affect our business generally. For example, following our acquisition of Renzu in May 2015, we subsequently determined that its mobile measurement and analytics product line was not a strategic fit and we implemented a plan to wind down the operations.
Future acquisitions could also result in dilutive issuances of our equity securities, the incurrence of debt, contingent liabilities, amortization expenses or write-offs of goodwill, any of which could harm our financial condition. In addition, any acquisitions we announce could be viewed negatively by users, marketers, developers, partners or investors.
We are an “emerging growth company,” and our election to comply with the reduced disclosure requirements as a public company may make our common stock less attractive to investors.
For so long as we remain an “emerging growth company,” as defined in the Jumpstart Our Business Startups Act of 2012, or the JOBS Act, we may take advantage of certain exemptions from various requirements that are applicable to public companies that are not “emerging growth companies,” including not being required to comply with the independent auditor attestation requirements of Section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, or the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, reduced disclosure obligations regarding executive compensation in our periodic reports and proxy statements, being required to provide fewer years of audited financial statements and exemptions from the requirements of holding a non-binding advisory vote on executive compensation and stockholder approval of any golden parachute payments not previously approved. We would cease to be an “emerging growth company” upon the earliest to occur of: (i) the last day of the fiscal year in which we have more than $1.07 billion in annual revenue; (ii) the date we qualify as a large accelerated filer, with at least $700 million of equity securities held by non-affiliates; (iii) the date on which we have, in any three-year period, issued more than $1.0 billion in non-convertible debt securities; and (iv) the last day of the fiscal year ending after the fifth year anniversary of our IPO. We may choose to take advantage of some but not all of these reduced reporting burdens. We have taken advantage of certain reduced reporting burdens in this Annual Report on Form 10-K. Accordingly, the information contained herein may be different than the information you receive from other public companies in which you hold stock. In addition, the JOBS Act also provides that an “emerging growth company” can take advantage of an extended transition period for complying with new or revised accounting standards. We have not chosen to take advantage of such extended transition period, and as a result, we will comply with new or revised accounting standards on the relevant dates on which adoption of such standards is required for non-emerging growth companies.
We cannot predict if investors will find our common stock less attractive because we may rely on these exemptions. If some investors find our common stock less attractive as a result, there may be a less active trading market for our common stock, and our stock price may be more volatile and may decline.
If our estimates or judgments relating to our critical accounting policies prove to be incorrect, our results of operations could be adversely affected.
The preparation of financial statements in conformity with GAAP requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the amounts reported in the consolidated financial statements and accompanying notes. We base our estimates on historical experience and on various other assumptions that we believe to be reasonable under the circumstances, as provided in the section titled “Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations.” The results of these estimates form the basis for making judgments about the carrying values of assets, liabilities and equity and the amount of revenue and expenses that are not readily apparent from other sources. Significant assumptions and estimates used in preparing our consolidated financial statements include those related to deferred commissions, stock-based compensation and business combination and valuation of goodwill and acquired intangible assets. Our results of operations may be adversely
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affected if our a ssumptions change or if actual circumstances differ from those in our assumptions, which could cause our results of operations to fall below the expectations of securities analysts and investors, resulting in a decline in the tra ding price of our common st ock.
The tracking of certain of our user metrics is done with internal tools and is not independently verified. Certain of our user metrics are subject to inherent challenges in measurement, and real or perceived inaccuracies in such metrics may harm our reputation and negatively affect our business.
We track certain user metrics with internal tools, which are not independently verified by any third party. Our internal tools have a number of limitations and our methodologies for tracking these metrics may change over time, which could result in unexpected changes to our user metrics, including the metrics we report. If the internal tools we use to track these metrics undercount or overcount performance or contain algorithm or other technical errors, the data we report may not be accurate. For example, we track the number of individual users and organizational domains but cannot determine the number of unique users or unique organizations in which we have paying customers with certainty, and our inability to determine the number of our unique users and unique organizations in which we have paying customers may adversely affect our understanding of certain aspects of our business and make it more challenging to manage our business. In addition, limitations or errors with respect to how we measure data (or the data that we measure) may affect our understanding of certain details of our business, which could affect our longer-term strategies. Additionally, regulatory changes could affect requirements related to data we track related to our metrics, and those changes could impact how we continue to measure and compare data over time. If our performance metrics are not accurate representations of our business, if we discover material inaccuracies in our metrics or if the metrics we rely on to track our performance do not provide an accurate measurement of our business, our reputation may be harmed and our business, results of operations and financial condition could be adversely affected, causing our stock price to decline.
Certain of our market opportunity estimates, growth forecasts and key business metrics included in this Annual Report on Form 10-K could prove to be inaccurate, and any real or perceived inaccuracies may harm our reputation and negatively affect our business.
Market opportunity estimates and growth forecasts are subject to significant uncertainty and are based on assumptions and estimates that may not prove to be accurate. The estimates and forecasts in this Annual Report on Form 10-K relating to the size and expected growth of our target market may prove to be inaccurate. Even if the markets in which we compete meet the size estimates and growth forecasted in this Annual Report on Form 10-K, our business could fail to grow at similar rates, if at all. We also rely on assumptions and estimates to calculate certain of our key business metrics, such as paying users. We regularly review and may adjust our processes for calculating our key business metrics to improve their accuracy. Our key business metrics may differ from estimates published by third parties or from similarly titled metrics of our competitors due to differences in methodology. If investors or analysts do not perceive our metrics to be accurate representations of our business, or if we discover material inaccuracies in our metrics, our reputation, business, results of operations and financial condition would be harmed.
If we fail to maintain an effective system of disclosure controls and internal control over financial reporting, our ability to produce timely and accurate financial statements or comply with applicable regulations could be impaired.
As a public company, we will be subject to the reporting requirements of the Exchange Act, the Sarbanes-Oxley Act and the rules and regulations of the applicable listing standards of The Nasdaq Stock Market LLC. We expect that the requirements of these rules and regulations will continue to increase our legal, accounting and financial compliance costs, make some activities more difficult, time-consuming and costly and place significant strain on our personnel, systems and resources.
The Sarbanes-Oxley Act requires, among other things, that we maintain effective disclosure controls and procedures and internal control over financial reporting. We are continuing to develop and refine our disclosure controls and other procedures that are designed to ensure that information required to be disclosed by us in the reports that we will file with the SEC is recorded, processed, summarized and reported within the time periods specified in SEC rules and forms and that information required to be disclosed in reports under the Exchange Act is accumulated and communicated to our principal executive and financial officers. We are also continuing to improve our internal control over financial reporting, which includes hiring additional accounting and financial personnel to implement such processes and controls. In order to maintain and improve the effectiveness of our
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disclosure controls and procedures and interna l control over financial reporting, we have expended, and anticipate that we will continue to expend, significant resources, including accounting-related costs and significant management oversight. If any of these new or improved controls and systems do no t perform as expected, we may experience material weaknesses in our controls.
Our current controls and any new controls that we develop may become inadequate because of changes in conditions in our business. Further, weaknesses in our disclosure controls and internal control over financial reporting may be discovered in the future. Any failure to develop or maintain effective controls or any difficulties encountered in their implementation or improvement could harm our results of operations or cause us to fail to meet our reporting obligations and may result in a restatement of our financial statements for prior periods. For example, in connection with the audits of our consolidated financial statements for the year ended December 31, 2017, we and our independent registered public accounting firm identified a material weakness in our internal control over financial reporting pertaining to our accounting for build-to-suit lease arrangements for our current corporate headquarters, we incurred tenant improvement costs which were reimbursed by the landlord. We have addressed this material weakness by enhancing the expertise of our finance and accounting staff and updating our accounting policy and believe that the material weakness has been remediated. However, if we identify future material weaknesses in our internal control over financial reporting or fail to meet the demands that will be placed upon us as a public company, including the requirements of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, we may be unable to accurately report our financial results or report them within the timeframes required by law or stock exchange regulations. Failure to comply with Section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act could also potentially subject us to sanctions or investigations by the SEC or other regulatory authorities. If additional material weaknesses exist or are discovered in the future, and we are unable to remediate any such material weakness, our reputation, business, results of operations and financial condition may be adversely affected. Any failure to implement and maintain effective internal control over financial reporting also could adversely affect the results of periodic management evaluations and annual independent registered public accounting firm attestation reports regarding the effectiveness of our internal control over financial reporting that we will eventually be required to include in our periodic reports that will be filed with the SEC. Ineffective disclosure controls and procedures and internal control over financial reporting could also cause investors to lose confidence in our reported financial and other information, which would likely have a negative effect on the trading price of our common stock. In addition, if we are unable to continue to meet these requirements, we may not be able to remain listed on The Nasdaq Global Select Market. We are not currently required to comply with the SEC rules that implement Section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act and are therefore not required to make a formal assessment of the effectiveness of our internal control over financial reporting for that purpose. As a public company, we will be required to provide an annual management report on the effectiveness of our internal control over financial reporting commencing with our second annual report on Form 10-K.
Our independent registered public accounting firm is not required to formally attest to the effectiveness of our internal control over financial reporting until after we are no longer an “emerging growth company” as defined in the JOBS Act. At such time, our independent registered public accounting firm may issue a report that is adverse in the event it is not satisfied with the level at which our internal control over financial reporting is documented, designed or operating. Any failure to maintain effective disclosure controls and internal control over financial reporting could have an adverse effect on our business and results of operations and could cause a decline in the price of our common stock.
Our reported results of operations may be adversely affected by changes in accounting principles generally accepted in the United States.
Generally accepted accounting principles in the United States, or GAAP, are subject to interpretation by the Financial Accounting Standards Board, or the FASB, the SEC and various bodies formed to promulgate and interpret appropriate accounting principles. A change in these principles or interpretations could have a significant effect on our reported results of operations and may even affect the reporting of transactions completed before the announcement or effectiveness of a change. For example, in May 2014, the FASB issued Accounting Standards Update, or ASU, 2014-09, Revenue from Contracts with Customers , or ASC 606, which superseded nearly all existing revenue recognition guidance. We adopted the requirements of ASC 606 as of January 1, 2018, utilizing the full retrospective method of transition. As such, ASC 606 is reflected in our financial results for all periods presented in this Annual Report on Form 10-K. The adoption of ASC 606 primarily resulted in changes to our accounting policies for revenue recognition and deferred commissions, which we believe to be critical accounting
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policies. We previously expensed commissions that are now deferred, but overall the impact of adopting ASC 606 was not material to revenue. We are currently evaluating the impac t of adoption of Accounting Standards Codification, or ASC, 2016-02, Leases (Topic 842). It is difficult to predict the impact of future changes to accounting principles or our accounting policies, any of which could negatively affect our results of operat ions.
Indemnity provisions in various agreements potentially expose us to liability for intellectual property infringement, data protection and other losses.
Our agreements with customers and other third parties may include indemnification provisions under which we agree to indemnify them for losses suffered or incurred as a result of claims of intellectual property infringement, data protection, damages caused by us to property or persons or other liabilities relating to or arising from our products or other contractual obligations. Some of these indemnity agreements provide for uncapped liability for which we would be responsible, and some indemnity provisions survive termination or expiration of the applicable agreement. Large indemnity payments could harm our business, results of operations and financial condition. Although we normally contractually limit our liability with respect to such obligations, we may still incur substantial liability related to them and we may be required to cease use of certain functions of our products as a result of any such claims. Any dispute with a customer with respect to such obligations could have adverse effects on our relationship with that customer and other existing customers and new customers and harm our business, results of operations and financial condition.
Risks Related to Our Common Stock
The trading price of our common stock could be volatile, and you could lose all or part of your investment.
Technology stocks have historically experienced high levels of volatility. The trading price of our common stock may fluctuate substantially depending on a number of factors, including those described in this “Risk Factors” section, many of which are beyond our control and may not be related to our operating performance. These fluctuations could cause you to lose all or part of your investment in our common stock. Factors that could cause fluctuations in the trading price of our common stock include the following:
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price and volume fluctuations in the overall stock market from time to time; |
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announcements of new products, solutions or technologies, commercial relationships, acquisitions or other events by us or our competitors; |
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changes in how customers perceive the benefits of our products and future offerings; |
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departures of key personnel; |
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• |
reaction to our press releases, other public announcements and filings with the SEC, as well as reaction to third party reports regarding our business, markets and the industry in which we operate; |
|
• |
fluctuations in the trading volume of our shares or the size of our public float; |
|
• |
sales of large blocks of our common stock; |
|
• |
actual or anticipated changes or fluctuations in our results of operations; |
|
• |
whether our results of operations meet the expectations of securities analysts or investors; |
|
• |
changes in actual or future expectations of investors or securities analysts; |
|
• |
actual or perceived significant data breach involving our products or website; |
|
• |
litigation involving us, our industry or both; |
|
• |
governmental or regulatory actions or audits; |
|
• |
regulatory developments in the United States, foreign countries or both; |
|
• |
general economic conditions and trends; |
|
• |
major catastrophic events in our domestic and foreign markets; and |
|
• |
“flash crashes,” “freeze flashes” or other glitches that disrupt trading on the securities exchange on which we are listed. |
35
In addition, if the market for technology stocks or the stock market in general experiences a loss of investor confidence, the trad ing price of our common stock could decline for reasons unrelated to our business, results of operations or financial condition. The trading price of our common stock might also decline in reaction to events that affect other companies in our industry even if these events do not directly affect us. In the past, following periods of volatility in the trading price of a company’s securities, securities class action litigation has often been brought against that company. If our stock price is volatile, we may become the target of securities litigation. Securities litigation could result in substantial costs and divert our management’s attention and resources from our business. This could have an adverse effect on our business, results of oper ations and financia l condition.
Shares of our common stock are subordinate in right of payment to our debts and other liabilities, resulting in a greater risk of loss for stockholders.
Shares of our common stock are subordinate in right of payment to all of our current and future debt. We cannot assure that there would be any remaining funds after the payment of all of our debts for any distribution to holders of the common stock.
Our debt service requirements and restrictive covenants limit our ability to borrow more money, to make distributions to our stockholders and to engage in other activities.
Our existing credit agreement, as amended, contains a number of covenants that limit our ability and our subsidiaries’ ability to, among other things, transfer or dispose of assets, pay dividends or make distributions, incur additional indebtedness, create liens, make investments, loans and acquisitions, engage in transactions with affiliates, merge or consolidate with other companies or sell substantially all of our assets. Our credit agreement is guaranteed by us and certain of our subsidiaries and secured by substantially all of the assets of the borrower subsidiary, us and the guarantor subsidiaries. The terms of our credit agreement may restrict our current and future operations and could adversely affect our ability to finance our future operations or capital needs or to execute preferred business strategies. In addition, complying with these covenants may make it more difficult for us to successfully execute our business strategy and compete against companies who are not subject to such restrictions. Additionally, our obligations to repay principal and interest on our indebtedness make us vulnerable to economic or market downturns.
If we are unable to comply with our payment requirements, our lenders may accelerate our obligations under our credit agreement and foreclose upon the collateral, or we may be forced to sell assets, restructure our indebtedness or seek additional equity capital, which would dilute our stockholders’ interests. If we fail to comply with any covenant it could result in an event of default under the agreement and the lenders (or any subsequent lender) could make the entire debt immediately due and payable. If this occurs, we might not be able to repay our debt or borrow sufficient funds to refinance it. Even if new financing is available, it may not be on terms that are acceptable to us. These events could cause us to cease operations.
Our failure to comply with our credit agreement and other indebtedness could require us to abandon our business.
Our indebtedness increases the risk that we will not be able to operate profitably because we will need to make principal and interest payments on our debt. Debt financing also exposes our stockholders to the risk that their holdings could be lost in the event of a default on the indebtedness and a foreclosure and sale of our assets for an amount that is less than the outstanding debt. Our ability to obtain additional debt financing, if required, will be subject to approval of our lenders, which may not be granted, or the interest rates and the credit environment as well as general economic factors and other factors over which we have no control may not be favorable. This may hinder our ability to service our existing debt or obtain additional debt financing.
If securities or industry analysts publish reports that are interpreted negatively by the investment community or publish negative research reports about our business, our share price and trading volume could decline.
The trading market for our common stock depends, to some extent, on the research and reports that securities or industry analysts publish about us or our business. We do not have any control over these analysts or the information contained in their reports. If one or more analysts publish research reports that are interpreted negatively by the investment community, or have a negative tone regarding our business, financial or operating performance, industry or end-markets, our share price could decline. In addition, if a majority of these analysts cease coverage of our company or fail to regularly publish reports on us, we could lose visibility in the financial markets, which could cause our share price or trading volume to decline.
36
Sales of subs tantial amounts of our common stock in the public markets, or the perception that such sales could occur, could reduce the price that our common stock might otherwise attain.
Sales of a substantial number of shares of our common stock in the public market, or the perception that such sales could occur, could adversely affect the market price of our common stock and may make it more difficult for you to sell your common stock at a time and price that you deem appropriate. We had 125,817,894 shares of capital stock outstanding as of December 31, 2018 that are generally freely tradable without restrictions or further registration under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, or the “Securities Act”, except for any shares held by our insiders and subject to periodic “blackout” periods, or held by our “affiliates” as defined in Rule 144 under the Securities Act.
We will incur increased costs as a result of operating as a public company, and our management will be required to devote substantial time to compliance with our public company responsibilities and corporate governance practices.
As a public company, and particularly after we are no longer an “emerging growth company,” we will incur significant legal, accounting and other expenses that we did not incur as a private company. The Sarbanes-Oxley Act, the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, the listing requirements of The Nasdaq Stock Market LLC and other applicable securities rules and regulations impose various requirements on public companies. Our management and other personnel will need to devote a substantial amount of time to compliance with these requirements. Moreover, these rules and regulations will increase our legal and financial compliance costs and will make some activities more time-consuming and costly. For example, we expect that these rules and regulations may make it more difficult and more expensive for us to obtain directors’ and officers’ liability insurance, which could make it more difficult for us to attract and retain qualified members of our board of directors. We cannot predict or estimate the amount of additional costs we will incur as a public company or the timing of such costs.
Anti-takeover provisions in our charter documents and under Delaware law could make an acquisition of us more difficult, limit attempts by our stockholders to replace or remove our current management and limit the market price of our common stock.
Provisions in our amended and restated certificate of incorporation and amended and restated bylaws may have the effect of rendering more difficult, delaying or preventing a change of control or changes in our management. Among other things, our amended and restated certificate of incorporation and amended and restated bylaws include provisions that:
|
• |
authorize our board of directors to issue, without further action by the stockholders, up to 100,000,000 shares of undesignated preferred stock; |
|
• |
require that any action to be taken by our stockholders be effected at a duly called annual or special meeting and not by written consent; |
|
• |
specify that special meetings of our stockholders can be called only by our board of directors, the Chair of our board of directors or our Chief Executive Officer; |
|
• |
establish an advance notice procedure for stockholder proposals to be brought before an annual meeting, including proposed nominations of persons for election to our board of directors; |
|
• |
establish that our board of directors is divided into three classes, Class I, Class II and Class III, with each class serving three-year staggered terms; |
|
• |
prohibit cumulative voting in the election of directors; |
|
• |
provide that our directors may be removed only for cause; |
|
• |
provide that vacancies on our board of directors may be filled only by a majority of directors then in office, even though less than a quorum; and |
|
• |
require the approval of our board of directors or the holders of at least 66 2 ⁄ 3 of our outstanding shares of capital stock to amend our amended and restated bylaws and certain provisions of our amended and restated certificate of incorporation. |
37
These provisions may frustrate or prevent any attempts by our stockholders to rep lace or remove our current management by making it more difficult for stockholders to replace members of our board of directors, which is responsible for appointing the members of our management. Provisions in our credit facilities also deter or prevent a business combination. In addition, institutional shareholder representative groups, shareholder activists and others may disagree with our corporate governance provisions or other practices, including anti-takeover provisions, such as those listed above. W e generally will consider recommendations of institutional shareholder representative groups, but we will make decisions based on what our board and management believe to be in the best long-term interests of our company and stockholders; however, these gr oups could make recommendations to our stockholders against our practices or our board members if they disagree with our positions. Finally, because we are incorporated in Delaware, we are governed by the provisions of Section 203 of the Delaware General C orporation Law, which generally prohibits a Delaware corporation from engaging in any of a broad range of business combinations with any “interested” stockholder for a period of three years following the date on which the stockholder became an “interested” stockholder.
Our amended and restated bylaws provide that the Court of Chancery of the State of Delaware and the federal district courts of the United States of America will be the exclusive forums for substantially all disputes between us and our stockholders, which could limit our stockholders’ ability to obtain a favorable judicial forum for disputes with us or our directors, officers or employees.
Our amended and restated bylaws provides that the Court of Chancery of the State of Delaware is the exclusive forum for:
|
• |
any derivative action or proceeding brought on our behalf; |
|
• |
any action asserting a breach of fiduciary duty; |
|
• |
any action asserting a claim against us arising under the Delaware General Corporation Law, our amended and restated certificate of incorporation or our amended and restated bylaws; and |
|
• |
any action asserting a claim against us that is governed by the internal-affairs doctrine. |
If a court were to find the Delaware exclusive-forum provision in our amended and restated bylaws to be inapplicable or unenforceable in an action, we may incur additional costs associated with resolving the dispute in other jurisdictions, which could seriously harm our business.
Our amended and restated bylaws further provides that the federal district courts of the United States of America will be the exclusive forum for resolving any complaint asserting a cause of action arising under the Securities Act.
Both of these exclusive-forum provisions may limit a stockholder’s ability to bring a claim in a judicial forum that it finds favorable for disputes with us or our directors, officers or other employees, which may discourage lawsuits against us and our directors, officers and other employees.
On December 19, 2018, the Delaware Court of Chancery issued a decision in Matthew Sciabacucchi v. Matthew B. Salzberg et al., C.A. No. 2017-0931-JTL (Del. Ch.), finding that provisions such as selecting the federal district courts of the United States of America as the exclusive forum for the resolution of any complaint asserting a cause of action arising under the Securities Act are not valid under Delaware law. In light of this decision of the Delaware Court of Chancery, we do not intend to enforce this provision in our amended and restated bylaws unless and until such time there is a final determination by the Delaware Supreme Court regarding the validity of such provisions. To the extent the Delaware Supreme Court makes a final determination that such provisions are not valid as a matter of Delaware law, our Board of Directors intends to amend its Bylaws to remove this provision.
We do not expect to declare any dividends in the foreseeable future.
We have never declared nor paid any cash dividends on our capital stock. We currently intend to retain any future earnings to finance the operation and expansion of our business, and we do not expect to declare or pay any cash dividends in the foreseeable future. Any determination to pay dividends in the future will be at the discretion of our board of directors. As a result, stockholders must rely on sales of their common stock after price appreciation as the only way to realize any future gains on their investment, if any. Our ability to pay dividends is also subject to restrictions in our credit facilities as well as the restrictions on the ability of our subsidiaries to pay dividends or make distributions to us.
38
Item 1B. Unresolve d Staff Comments
None.
Our corporate headquarters occupies approximately 199,000 square feet in San Mateo, California under our master lease agreement and multiple sublease agreements that expire at various times through December 2028. We also lease offices in Portland, Oregon; Seattle, Washington; Ottawa, Canada; Dublin, Ireland; and Sydney, Australia.
We believe that our existing facilities are sufficient for our current needs. In the future, we may need to add new facilities and expand our existing facilities as we add employees, grow our infrastructure and evolve our business, and we believe that suitable additional or substitute space will be available on commercially reasonable terms to meet our future needs.
From time to time, we may be party to legal proceedings and litigation arising in the ordinary course of business, including, but not limited to, patent and privacy matters, labor and employment claims, class action lawsuits, as well as inquiries, investigations, audits and other regulatory proceedings. Periodically, we evaluate developments in our legal matters and record a liability when we believe that it is both probable that a loss has been incurred and the amount can be reasonably estimated. Significant judgment is required to determine both likelihood of there being, and the estimated amount of, a loss related to such matters, and our judgment may be incorrect.
There are currently no legal matters or claims that have arisen from the normal course of business that we believe would have a material impact on our financial position, results of operations or cash flows.
Future litigation may be necessary, among other things, to defend ourselves or our users by determining the scope, enforceability and validity of third-party proprietary rights or to establish our proprietary rights. The results of any litigation cannot be predicted with certainty, and regardless of the outcome, litigation can have an adverse impact on us because of defense and settlement costs, diversion of management resources and other factors.
Item 4. Mine Safety Disclosures
Not applicable.
39
Item 5. Market for Registrant’s Common Equity, Related Stockholder Matters and Issuer Purchases of Equity Securities
Our common stock is traded on The Nasdaq Global Select Market under the symbol “SVMK”.
Stockholders of Record
As of February 15, 2019, there were 381 stockholders of record of our common stock. However, because many of our shares of common stock are held by brokers and other institutions on behalf of stockholders, we are unable to accurately estimate the total number of stockholders represented by these record holders.
Dividend Policy
We have never declared or paid any cash dividends on our capital stock. We currently intend to retain any future earnings and do not expect to pay any dividends in the foreseeable future. Additionally, our ability to pay dividends on our common stock is limited by restrictions on our ability to pay dividends or make distributions under the terms of our credit facilities. Any future determination to declare cash dividends will be made at the discretion of our board of directors, subject to applicable laws, and will depend on a number of factors, including our financial condition, results of operations, capital requirements, contractual restrictions, general business conditions and other factors that our board of directors may deem relevant.
Unregistered Sales of Equity Securities
Option and RSU Issuances
During the fiscal year ended December 31, 2018, prior to filing our Registration Statement on Form S-8 on October 1, 2018:
|
• |
We granted to certain of our directors, officers, employees and consultants an aggregate of 3,483,580 restricted stock units to be settled into shares of our common stock under our 2011 Equity Incentive Plan. |
|
• |
We issued and sold to our employees an aggregate of 66,265 shares of our common stock upon the exercise of options issued under our 2011 Equity Incentive Plan at exercise prices ranging from $0.79 per share to $16.03 per share, for a weighted-average exercise price of $6.62 per share. |
Common Stock Issuances
On September 28, 2018, we sold 3,333,333 shares of our common stock to Salesforce Ventures LLC in a concurrent private placement with our IPO at a price of $12.00 per share.
None of the foregoing transactions involved any underwriters, underwriting discounts or commissions, or any public offering. We believe the offers, sales, and issuances of the above securities were exempt from registration under the Securities Act by virtue of (i) Section 4(a)(2) of the Securities Act (or Regulation D promulgated thereunder) because the issuance of securities to the recipients did not involve a public offering, (ii) in reliance on Rule 701 promulgated thereunder because the transactions were pursuant to compensatory benefit plans or contracts relating to compensation as provided under such rule, or (iii) Regulation S promulgated under the Securities Act as transactions made outside of the United States. The recipients of the securities in each of these transactions represented their intentions to acquire the securities for investment only and not with a view to or for sale in connection with any distribution thereof, and appropriate legends were placed upon the stock certificates issued in these transactions. All recipients had adequate access, through their relationships with us, to information about us. The sales of these securities were made without any general solicitation or advertising.
40
Use of Proceeds from Public Offering of Common Stock and Concurrent Private Placement
On September 28, 2018, we closed our IPO, in which we sold 17,250,000 shares of our common stock (including the additional 2,250,000 shares that were sold pursuant to the underwriters’ option to purchase additional shares of common stock) at a price to the public of $12.00 per share. Immediately subsequent to the closing of our IPO, Salesforce Ventures LLC purchased 3,333,333 shares of our common stock from us at $12.00 per share. The offer and sale of the shares in our IPO were registered under the Securities Act pursuant to a Registration Statement on Form S-1 (File No. 333-227099), which was declared effective by the SEC on September 25, 2018. In the aggregate, we raised $225.3 million in net proceeds after deducting underwriters’ discounts and commissions of $14.5 million and after deducting offering expenses of approximately $7.2 million, net of reimbursements. The managing underwriters of our IPO were J.P. Morgan Securities LLC, Allen & Company LLC and Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Incorporated. No payments were made by us to directors, officers or persons owning ten percent or more of our common stock or to their associates, or to our affiliates, other than payments in the ordinary course of business to officers for salaries and to non-employee directors pursuant to our director compensation policy.
There has been no material change in the planned use of proceeds from our initial public offering as described in our final prospectus filed with the SEC on September 26, 2018 pursuant to Rule 424(b)(4).
Stock Performance Graph
The following stock performance graph and related information shall not be deemed “soliciting material” or to be “filed” with the SEC, nor shall such information be incorporated by reference into any future filing under the Securities Act, or Exchange Act, except to the extent that we specifically incorporate it by reference into such filing.
The following stock performance graph compares total stockholder returns for SVMK Inc. relative to the S&P 500 Index and the S&P 500 Information Technology Index, assuming a $100 investment at market close on September 26, 2018, which was the initial trading day of our common stock. The stock performance shown in the graph below is not necessarily indicative of future price performance.
Company / Index |
|
Base period 9/26/18 |
|
|
9/30/2018 |
|
|
10/31/2018 |
|
|
11/30/2018 |
|
|
12/31/2018 |
|
|||||
SVMK Inc. |
|
$ |
100.00 |
|
|
$ |
92.98 |
|
|
$ |
62.12 |
|
|
$ |
82.83 |
|
|
$ |
71.17 |
|
S&P 500 Index |
|
|
100.00 |
|
|
|
100.28 |
|
|
|
93.32 |
|
|
|
94.98 |
|
|
|
86.27 |
|
S&P 500 Information Technology Index |
|
|
100.00 |
|
|
|
100.97 |
|
|
|
92.84 |
|
|
|
90.87 |
|
|
|
83.12 |
|
41
Item 6. Selected Financial Data
The following selected consolidated financial data are derived from our audited consolidated financial statements and should be read in conjunction with Item 7 “Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations” and our consolidated financial statements and the related notes appearing in Item 8 “Financial Statements and Supplementary Data” of this Annual Report on Form 10-K. The historical results are not necessarily indicative of the results to be expected in any future period.
|
|
Year Ended December 31, |
|
|||||||||
(in thousands, except per share amounts) |
|
2018 |
|
|
2017 |
|
|
2016 |
|
|||
Revenue |
|
$ |
254,324 |
|
|
$ |
218,773 |
|
|
$ |
207,295 |
|
Cost of revenue (1)(2) |
|
|
77,982 |
|
|
|
62,679 |
|
|
|
67,755 |
|
Gross profit |
|
|
176,342 |
|
|
|
156,094 |
|
|
|
139,540 |
|
Operating expenses: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Research and development (1) |
|
|
106,188 |
|
|
|
53,660 |
|
|
|
37,985 |
|
Sales and marketing (1)(2) |
|
|
95,783 |
|
|
|
73,511 |
|
|
|
73,970 |
|
General and administrative (1) |
|
|
97,339 |
|
|
|
47,940 |
|
|
|
36,832 |
|
Restructuring (1) |
|
|
3,525 |
|
|
|
1,785 |
|
|
|
25,256 |
|
Total operating expenses |
|
|
302,835 |
|
|
|
176,896 |
|
|
|
174,043 |
|
Loss from operations |
|
|
(126,493 |
) |
|
|
(20,802 |
) |
|
|
(34,503 |
) |
Interest expense |
|
|
27,801 |
|
|
|
26,865 |
|
|
|
32,893 |
|
Other non-operating income (expense), net |
|
|
(298 |
) |
|
|
7,610 |
|
|
|
(4,250 |
) |
Loss before income taxes |
|
|
(154,592 |
) |
|
|
(40,057 |
) |
|
|
(71,646 |
) |
Provision for (benefit from) income taxes |
|
|
148 |
|
|
|
(16,047 |
) |
|
|
4,704 |
|
Net loss |
|
$ |
(154,740 |
) |
|
$ |
(24,010 |
) |
|
$ |
(76,350 |
) |
Net loss per share, basic and diluted |
|
$ |
(1.43 |
) |
|
$ |
(0.24 |
) |
|
$ |
(0.77 |
) |
Weighted-average shares used in computing basic and diluted net loss per share |
|
|
107,900 |
|
|
|
100,244 |
|
|
|
98,539 |
|
(1) |
Includes stock-based compensation, net of amounts capitalized as follows: |
|
|
Year Ended December 31, |
|
|||||||||
(in thousands) |
|
2018 |
|
|
2017 |
|
|
2016 |
|
|||
Cost of revenue |
|
$ |
8,931 |
|
|
$ |
2,503 |
|
|
$ |
4,114 |
|
Research and development |
|
|
48,739 |
|
|
|
9,918 |
|
|
|
5,756 |
|
Sales and marketing |
|
|
19,046 |
|
|
|
8,069 |
|
|
|
8,712 |
|
General and administrative |
|
|
55,054 |
|
|
|
14,496 |
|
|
|
12,301 |
|
Restructuring |
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
2,074 |
|
Stock-based compensation, net of amounts capitalized |
|
$ |
131,770 |
|
|
$ |
34,986 |
|
|
$ |
32,957 |
|
(2) |
Includes amortization of acquisition intangible assets as follows: |
|
|
Year Ended December 31, |
|
|||||||||
(in thousands) |
|
2018 |
|
|
2017 |
|
|
2016 |
|
|||
Cost of revenue |
|
$ |
1,952 |
|
|
$ |
2,040 |
|
|
$ |
4,505 |
|
Sales and marketing |
|
|
2,318 |
|
|
|
2,421 |
|
|
|
4,267 |
|
Amortization of acquisition intangible assets |
|
$ |
4,270 |
|
|
$ |
4,461 |
|
|
$ |
8,772 |
|
42
Consolidated Balance Sheet Data
|
|
As of December 31, |
|
|||||||||
(in thousands) |
|
2018 |
|
|
2017 |
|
|
2016 |
|
|||
Cash and cash equivalents |
|
$ |
153,807 |
|
|
$ |
35,345 |
|
|
$ |
23,287 |
|
Working capital (1) |
|
|
135,739 |
|
|
|
16,560 |
|
|
|
566 |
|
Total deferred revenue (2) |
|
|
101,472 |
|
|
|
85,048 |
|
|
|
76,420 |
|
Financing obligation on leased facility |
|
|
92,009 |
|
|
|
93,385 |
|
|
|
81,939 |
|
Total debt, net (3) |
|
|
217,415 |
|
|
|
318,321 |
|
|
|
319,300 |
|
Total stockholders' equity |
|
|
219,383 |
|
|
|
40,043 |
|
|
|
33,021 |
|
(1) |
Working capital is calculated as current assets less current liabilities, excluding deferred revenue. |
(2) |
Includes short term deferred revenue of $101.2 million, $84.8 million and $76.4 million as of December 31, 2018, 2017 and 2016, respectively, and long-term deferred revenue of $0.2 million and $0.2 million as of December 31, 2018 and 2017, respectively. |
(3) |
Excludes unamortized issuance costs of $0.4 million that were included in prepaid expenses and other current assets and $1.4 million that were in other assets as of December 31, 2018. |
43
Item 7. Management’s Discussion and Analysis o f Financial Condition and Results of Operations
The following discussion and analysis of our financial condition and results of operations should be read in conjunction with our consolidated financial statements and related notes included elsewhere in this Annual Report on Form 10-K. As discussed in the section titled “Forward-Looking Statements,”, the following discussion and analysis contains forward-looking statements that involve risks and uncertainties. Our actual results could differ materially from those discussed below. Factors that could cause or contribute to such differences include, but are not limited to, those identified below and those discussed in the section titled “Risk Factors” under Part II, Item 1A in this Annual Report on Form 10-K.
Overview
We were founded in 1999 and are a leading global provider of survey software products that enable organizations to engage with their key constituents, including their customers, employees and the markets they serve. Our mission is to power curious individuals and organizations to measure, benchmark and act on the opinions that drive success. Our People Powered Data platform enables conversations at scale to deliver impactful customer, employee and market insights to our over 17.5 million active users globally.
Our widely adopted cloud-based SaaS platform helps individuals and organizations design and distribute surveys that generate an average of more than 20 million answered questions daily across more than 190 countries and territories. Our products drive actionable insights that allow organizations to solve mission-critical business problems, including enhancing customer experience and loyalty, increasing employee productivity and retention and optimizing product and marketing investments.
Our products
We generate substantially all of our revenue from the sale of subscriptions to our products. In addition to our free basic survey product, we offer multiple tiers of subscriptions to individual users—Standard, Advantage and Premier—that provide a compelling range of functionality and features to power the collection and analysis of feedback.
We also offer team versions of our individual Advantage and Premier subscription plans. Our SurveyMonkey Teams’ versions of such subscription plans are oriented for smaller groups of users who want to collaborate with others. In addition to the features available in individual Advantage and Premier subscription plans, the SurveyMonkey Teams’ versions provide collaboration capabilities around sharing, commenting and analyzing surveys and a shared asset library for team users.
In addition, we offer an enterprise-grade version of our survey platform, SurveyMonkey Enterprise, which provides managed user accounts, customized company branding, enterprise-grade security, sophisticated collaboration capabilities and deep integrations with a broad set of leading software applications. We also generate revenue from a wide range of purpose-built solutions, including SurveyMonkey CX for customer experience and feedback, TechValidate for content marketing, SurveyMonkey Engage for employee engagement and SurveyMonkey Audience for market research and analysis. We generate revenue from these purpose-built solutions by subscription or on a transactional basis, depending on the product.
Our business model
Our self-serve offering underpins a powerful, capital efficient business model that is fueled by the virality of our products. We believe our brand is synonymous with high-quality, easy to use products. The strength of our brand enables us to rapidly and cost-effectively acquire new users through free organic searches, paid online marketing and word of mouth referrals. Our survey platform and purpose-built solutions can be used without costly implementation, professional services or training, and anyone can create a survey in minutes. Our free basic survey product allows users to design and send simple surveys to collect and analyze feedback. Users and respondents can access our survey platform on a broad range of desktop and mobile devices, and surveys can be distributed through multiple channels, such as email, web, mobile, messaging apps and social media. Users often share results
44
and collaborate with others, who are then attracted to our survey platform and f requently sign up as new users. Every person who ta kes a survey is a potential future customer, and we seek to capitalize on that opportunity through end of survey marketing designed to engage further with respondents and encourage them to create accounts and become new users. We invest in new features and improvements to our product functionality as well as targeted marketing campaigns to drive conversion of unpaid users to paid users. As a result, we have a predictable, high-visibility revenue model where we generate more than 90% our revenue from sales o f subscriptions to our products. We have a broad and diverse customer base and no customer represented more than 1% of our revenue in any of the periods presented .
We supplement our self-serve channel with a targeted sales effort to upsell organizations to SurveyMonkey Enterprise, to expand deployments of SurveyMonkey Enterprise within organizations and to cross-sell purpose-built solutions within organizations. We believe our existing user base represents a significant opportunity to expand our business and increase our revenue. We have 646,727 paying users in more than 345,000 organizational domains and believe the individual paying users within organizational domains represent an opportunity to significantly increase conversion from individual subscriptions to our enterprise offerings.
Key Business Metric
We review a number of operating and financial metrics, including the following key metric to evaluate our business, measure our performance, identify trends affecting our business, formulate our business plan and make strategic decisions.
|
|
As of December 31, |
|
|||||||||
|
|
2018 |
|
|
2017 |
|
|
2016 |
|
|||
Paying users |
|
|
646,727 |
|
|
|
606,077 |
|
|
|
574,872 |
|
Paying users
We define a paying user as an individual customer of our survey platform or form-based application, a seat within a SurveyMonkey Enterprise deployment or a subscription to one of our purpose-built solutions, in each case as of the end of a period. One person would count as multiple paying users if the person had more than one paid license at the end of the period. For example, if an individual paying user also had a designated seat in a SurveyMonkey Enterprise deployment, we would count that person as two paying users. Paying users is an indicator of the scale of our business and an important factor in our ability to increase our revenue.
Non-GAAP Financial Measures
We believe that, in addition to our results determined in accordance with GAAP, core revenue, average revenue per paying user, free cash flow and adjusted EBITDA, all of which are non-GAAP financial measures, are useful in evaluating our business, results of operations and financial condition.
|
|
Year Ended December 31, |
|
|||||||||
(in thousands, except ARPU) |
|
2018 |
|
|
2017 |
|
|
2016 |
|
|||
Core revenue |
|
$ |
254,324 |
|
|
$ |
213,984 |
|
|
$ |
192,056 |
|
Average revenue per paying user (ARPU) |
|
|
406 |
|
|
|
362 |
|
|
|
349 |
|
Free cash flow |
|
|
23,339 |
|
|
|
5,579 |
|
|
|
(4,895 |
) |
Adjusted EBITDA |
|
|
58,030 |
|
|
|
61,882 |
|
|
|
64,721 |
|
Core revenue
We define core revenue as revenue from our survey platform, form-based application and purpose-built solutions, excluding the non-self-serve portion of SurveyMonkey Audience, which we generally ceased offering at the end of the second quarter of 2017. We consider core revenue to be an important measure because it excludes revenue from an offering that we generally no longer provide, and so provides a better understanding of our current
45
business and provides comparability of our results of operations over ti me. Core revenue has limitations as an analytical tool, and it should not be considered in isolation or as a substitute for analysis of other GAAP financial measures, such as revenue. Some of the limitations of core revenue are that it does not reflect all of our revenue in the periods presented and that our results of operations for the periods presented reflect expenses that we incurred to generate revenue that is excluded fr om core revenue.
The following is a reconciliation of core revenue to the most comparable GAAP measure, revenue:
|
|
Year Ended December 31, |
|
|||||||||
(in thousands) |
|
2018 |
|
|
2017 |
|
|
2016 |
|
|||
Revenue |
|
$ |
254,324 |
|
|
$ |
218,773 |
|
|
$ |
207,295 |
|
Non-self-serve SurveyMonkey Audience revenue |
|
|
— |
|
|
|
(4,789 |
) |
|
|
(15,239 |
) |
Core revenue |
|
$ |
254,324 |
|
|
$ |
213,984 |
|
|
$ |
192,056 |
|
Average revenue per paying user
We define average revenue per paying user, or ARPU, as core revenue divided by the average number of paying users during the period. For interim periods, we use annualized core revenue which is calculated by dividing the core revenue for the period by the number of days in that period and multiplying this value by 365 days. We calculate the average number of paying users by adding the number of paying users as of the end of the prior period to the number of paying users as of the end of the current period, and then dividing by two. We consider ARPU to be an important measure because it helps illustrate underlying trends in our business by showing investors the changes in per-user revenue, which is a reflection of our ability to successfully upsell or cross-sell our products and purpose-built solutions. ARPU has limitations as an analytic tool, and it should not be considered in isolation or as a substitute for analysis of other GAAP financial measures. Some of the limitations of ARPU are that it is a calculation that does not reflect revenue from the non-self-serve portion of our SurveyMonkey Audience solution in any of the periods presented, and also does not reflect expenses that we incurred to generate revenue that is excluded from core revenue.
Free cash flow
We define free cash flow as GAAP net cash provided by operating activities less purchases of property and equipment, net of tenant improvement reimbursements, and capitalized internal-use software. We consider free cash flow to be an important measure because it measures our liquidity after deducting capital expenditures for purchases of property and equipment and capitalized software development costs, which we believe provides a more accurate view of our cash generation and cash available to grow our business. For the years ended December 31, 2018, 2017 and 2016, our free cash flow included cash payments for interest on our long-term debt of $20.5 million, $19.9 million and $19.8 million, respectively. For the year ended December 31, 2018, our free cash flow also included a one-time payment for employer payroll taxes on performance-based restricted stock units, or Performance RSUs, that vested upon the satisfaction of both a performance vesting condition (the effectiveness of the registration statement for our IPO) and a service condition, of $1.2 million and $0.9 million in third-party fees related to the refinancing of our credit facilities. For the year ended December 31, 2017, free cash flow also included a one-time deferred payment of $7.7 million related to our acquisition of TechValidate and $4.3 million in third-party fees related to the refinancing of our credit facilities. We expect our free cash flow to increase as we reduce cash paid for interest on our long-term debt following the partial repayment of the outstanding indebtedness under our credit facilities of $101.3 million. We expect to generate positive free cash flow over the long term. Free cash flow has limitations as an analytical tool, and it should not be considered in isolation or as a substitute for analysis of other GAAP financial measures, such as net cash provided by operating activities. Some of the limitations of free cash flow are that free cash flow does not reflect our future contractual commitments and may be calculated differently by other companies in our industry, limiting its usefulness as a comparative measure.
46
The following is a reconciliation of free cash flow to the most comparable GAAP measure, net cash provided by operating activities:
|
|
Year Ended December 31, |
|
|||||||||
(in thousands) |
|
2018 |
|
|
2017 |
|
|
2016 |
|
|||
Net cash provided by operating activities |
|
$ |
45,372 |
|
|
$ |
45,026 |
|
|
$ |
35,842 |
|
Purchases of property and equipment, net (1) |
|
|
(9,981 |
) |
|
|
(24,128 |
) |
|
|
(24,903 |
) |
Capitalized internal-use software |
|
|
(12,052 |
) |
|
|
(15,319 |
) |
|
|
(15,834 |
) |
Free cash flow |
|
$ |
23,339 |
|
|
$ |
5,579 |
|
|
$ |
(4,895 |
) |
(1) |
Includes reimbursement of tenant improvement allowances under our lease financing obligation of $8.4 million and $5.5 million for the years ended December 31, 2017 and 2016, respectively. |
Adjusted EBITDA
We define adjusted EBITDA as net loss excluding interest expense, provision for (benefit from) income taxes, depreciation and amortization, other non-operating expenses (income), net, stock-based compensation and restructuring costs, acquisition-related costs, financing costs and employer payroll taxes on Performance RSUs. We consider adjusted EBITDA to be an important measure because it helps illustrate underlying trends in our business that could otherwise be masked by the effect of the income or expenses that are not indicative of the core operating performance of our business that are excluded from adjusted EBITDA. Adjusted EBITDA has limitations as an analytical tool, and it should not be considered in isolation or as a substitute for analysis of other GAAP financial measures. Some of the limitations of adjusted EBITDA are that it excludes recurring expenses for interest payments, does not reflect the dilution that results from stock-based compensation, and does not reflect the cost to replace depreciated property and equipment. It may be calculated differently by other companies in our industry, limiting its usefulness as a comparative measure.
The following is a reconciliation of adjusted EBITDA to the most comparable GAAP measure, net loss:
|
|
Year Ended December 31, |
|
|||||||||
(in thousands) |
|
2018 |
|
|
2017 |
|
|
2016 |
|
|||
Net loss |
|
$ |
(154,740 |
) |
|
$ |
(24,010 |
) |
|
$ |
(76,350 |
) |
Provision for (benefit from) income taxes |
|
|
148 |
|
|
|
(16,047 |
) |
|
|
4,704 |
|
Other non-operating (expenses) income, net |
|
|
298 |
|
|
|
(7,610 |
) |
|
|
4,250 |
|
Interest expense (1) |
|
|
27,801 |
|
|
|
26,865 |
|
|
|
32,893 |
|
Depreciation and amortization |
|
|
47,166 |
|
|
|
42,391 |
|
|
|
36,698 |
|
Stock-based compensation |
|
|
131,770 |
|
|
|
34,986 |
|
|
|
32,957 |
|
Restructuring costs |
|
|
3,525 |
|
|
|
1,785 |
|
|
|
23,182 |
|
Acquisition-related costs |
|
|
— |
|
|
|
347 |
|
|
|
6,387 |
|
Financing costs |
|
|
879 |
|
|
|
3,175 |
|
|
|
— |
|
Employer payroll taxes on Performance RSUs |
|
|
1,183 |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
Adjusted EBITDA |
|
$ |
58,030 |
|
|
$ |
61,882 |
|
|
$ |
64,721 |
|
(1) |
Includes interest expense on our credit facilities and financing lease obligations related to our corporate headquarters. |
Core revenue, ARPU, free cash flow and adjusted EBITDA are presented for supplemental informational purposes only and should not be considered a substitute for financial information presented in accordance with GAAP.
47
During the years ended December 31, 2017 and 2016, we restructured our business to focus on our core products, increase operating efficiency and reduce costs over the long-term. In November 2017, in conjunction with the hiring of our new Chief Sales Officer, we implemented a plan to centralize our U.S. salesforce in our San Mateo, California headquarters. In November 2016, we implemented a plan to wind down the operations of a previously acquired business. In March 2016, we implemented a plan to reduce our sales and marketing headcount and to close several international offices, which was primarily related to our decision to generally cease offering the non-self-serve portion of our SurveyMonkey Audience solution. We recognized aggregate restructuring costs of $3.5 million in 2018, $1.8 million in 2017 and $25.3 million in 2016. As of December 31, 2018 and 2017, $0.9 million and $1.4 million, respectively, has been accrued primarily related to the restructurings and non-cancellable lease costs, which amounts will be paid through 2021. Restructuring costs incurred during 2018 are related to our November 2017 restructuring plan and are primarily due to changes in estimated lease termination costs and related leasehold impairment costs.
Components of Results of Operations
Revenue
We derive revenue primarily from sales of subscriptions to our products.
We recognize revenue ratably over the subscription term, generally ranging from one month to one year, as long as all other revenue recognition criteria have been met. We have an increasing proportion of multi-year contracts with organizations. Our contracts are generally non-cancellable and do not contain refund provisions. Subscription fees are collected primarily from credit cards through our website at the beginning of the subscription period.
We also generate a small portion of revenue from one of our purpose-built solutions that we sell on a transactional basis.
No customer represented more than 1% of our revenue in any of the periods presented.
Cost of Revenue and Operating Expenses
We allocate shared costs, such as depreciation on equipment shared by all departments, facilities (including rent and utilities), employee benefit costs and information technology costs to all departments based on headcount. As such, allocated shared costs are reflected in each cost of revenue and operating expense category, other than restructuring.
Cost of Revenue . Our cost of revenue consists primarily of expenses associated with the delivery and distribution of our products to our users. These expenses generally consist of infrastructure costs, personnel costs and other related costs. Infrastructure costs generally include expenses related to the operation of our data centers, such as data center equipment depreciation, facility costs (such as co-location rentals), amortization of capitalized software, payment processing fees, website hosting costs, external sample costs and charitable donations associated with our SurveyMonkey Audience solution. Personnel costs include salaries, bonuses, stock-based compensation, other employee benefits and travel-related expenses for employees whose primary responsibilities relate to supporting our infrastructure and delivering user support. Other related costs include amortization of acquired developed technology intangible assets and allocated overhead. We plan to continue investing in additional resources to enhance the capability and reliability of our infrastructure to support user growth and increased use of our products. We expect that cost of revenue, excluding the impact from certain stock-based compensation charges described in “—Significant Impacts of Stock-Based Compensation”, will increase in absolute dollars in future periods and vary from period to period as a percentage of revenue in the near term. We expect that cost of revenue will decrease as a percentage of revenue in the long term. In addition, as a result of certain stock-based compensation charges described in “—Significant Impacts of Stock-Based Compensation,” our cost of revenue increased significantly in absolute dollars during the year ended December 31, 2018 due to the completion of our IPO.
48
Research and Development . Research and development expenses primarily include personnel costs, costs for third-party consultants, depreciation of equipment used in research and development activities and allocated overhead. Personnel costs for our research and development organization include salaries, bonuses, stock-based compensation, other employee benefits and travel-related expenses. Our research and developmen t efforts focus on maintaining and enhancing existing products and adding new products. Except for costs associated with the development of internal-use software, research and development costs are expensed as incurred. We expect that research and developm ent expenses, excluding the impact from certain stock-based compensation charges described in “—Significant Impacts of Stock-Based Compensation”, will increase in absolute dollars in future periods and vary from period to period as a percentage of revenue in the near term. We expect that research and development expenses will remain relatively constant as a percentage of revenue in the long term. In addition, as a result of certain stock-based compensation charges described in “—Significant Impacts of Stock -Based Compensation,” our research and development expenses increased significantly in absolute dollars during the year ended December 31 , 2018 due to the completion of our IPO .
Sales and Marketing . Sales and marketing expenses primarily include personnel costs, costs related to brand campaigns, paid marketing, amortization of acquired trade name and customer relationship intangible assets and allocated overhead. Personnel costs for our sales and marketing organization include salaries, bonuses, sales commissions, stock-based compensation, other employee benefits and travel-related expenses. Sales commissions earned by our sales personnel, including any related payroll taxes, that are considered to be incremental and recoverable costs of obtaining a customer contract are deferred and amortized over an estimated period of benefit of generally four years. We expect that sales and marketing expenses, excluding the impact from certain stock-based compensation charges described in “—Significant Impacts of Stock-Based Compensation”, will increase in absolute dollars in future periods and increase as a percentage of revenue in the near term. We expect that sales and marketing expenses will vary from period to period in the long term. In addition, as a result of certain stock-based compensation charges described in “—Significant Impacts of Stock-Based Compensation,” our sales and marketing expenses increased significantly in absolute dollars during the year ended December 31, 2018 due to the completion of our IPO.
General and Administrative . General and administrative expenses primarily include personnel costs for legal, finance, human resources and other administrative functions, as well as certain executives. Personnel costs for our general and administrative staff include salaries, bonuses, stock-based compensation, other employee benefits and travel-related expenses. In addition, general and administrative expenses include outside legal, accounting and other professional fees, non-income-based taxes and allocated overhead. We expect that general and administrative expenses, excluding the impact from certain stock-based compensation charges described in “—Significant Impacts of Stock-Based Compensation”, will increase in absolute dollars in future periods and vary from period to period as a percentage of revenue in the near term. We expect that general and administrative expenses will decrease as a percentage of revenue in the long term. In addition, as a result of certain stock-based compensation charges described in “—Significant Impacts of Stock-Based Compensation,” our general and administrative expenses increased significantly in absolute dollars during the year ended December 31, 2018 due to the completion of our IPO.
Restructuring . Restructuring expenses primarily include personnel costs, lease termination expenses and other related costs. Personnel costs related to the restructurings include severance payments, stock-based compensation and other benefits. Lease termination expenses related to the restructurings include non-cancellable lease costs from vacated facilities. See “—2017 and 2016 Restructurings” above for additional information.
Interest Expense
Interest expense consists of interest on credit facilities and financing obligations related to our corporate headquarters. We expect future interest expense to decrease resulting from the repayment of a portion of our outstanding indebtedness under our credit facilities and our adoption of ASC 842. For additional information regarding our credit facilities and financing obligations, see Notes 8 and 9, respectively, and for additional information regarding our adoption of ASC 842, see Notes 2 and 8 of the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements included elsewhere in this Annual Report on Form 10-K.
49
Other Non-Operating Income (Expense), Net
Other non-operating income (expense), net consists primarily of interest income, net foreign currency exchange gains (losses), gain on sale of private company investments and net realized gains and losses related to investments.
Provision for (Benefit from) Income Taxes
Provision for (benefit from) income taxes consists of U.S. federal and state income taxes and income taxes in certain foreign jurisdictions in which we conduct business. We maintain a full valuation allowance on our federal and state deferred tax assets that we have determined are not realizable on a more likely than not basis. For additional information regarding our income taxes, see Note 10 of the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements included elsewhere in this Annual Report on Form 10-K.
Results of Operations
The following tables set forth our results of operations for the periods presented and as a percentage of our revenue for those periods. Percentages presented in the following tables may not sum due to rounding.
|
|
Year Ended December 31, |
|
|||||||||
(in thousands) |
|
2018 |
|
|
2017 |
|
|
2016 |
|
|||
Revenue |
|
$ |
254,324 |
|
|
$ |
218,773 |
|
|
$ |
207,295 |
|
Cost of revenue (1)(2) |
|
|
77,982 |
|
|
|
62,679 |
|
|
|
67,755 |
|
Gross profit |
|
|
176,342 |
|
|
|
156,094 |
|
|
|
139,540 |
|
Operating expenses: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Research and development (1) |
|
|
106,188 |
|
|
|
53,660 |
|
|
|
37,985 |
|
Sales and marketing (1)(2) |
|
|
95,783 |
|
|
|
73,511 |
|
|
|
73,970 |
|
General and administrative (1) |
|
|
97,339 |
|
|
|
47,940 |
|
|
|
36,832 |
|
Restructuring (1) |
|
|
3,525 |
|
|
|
1,785 |
|
|
|
25,256 |
|
Total operating expenses |
|
|
302,835 |
|
|
|
176,896 |
|
|
|
174,043 |
|
Loss from operations |
|
|
(126,493 |
) |
|
|
(20,802 |
) |
|
|
(34,503 |
) |
Interest expense |
|
|
27,801 |
|
|
|
26,865 |
|
|
|
32,893 |
|
Other non-operating income (expense), net |
|
|
(298 |
) |
|
|
7,610 |
|
|
|
(4,250 |
) |
Loss before income taxes |
|
|
(154,592 |
) |
|
|
(40,057 |
) |
|
|
(71,646 |
) |
Provision for (benefit from) income taxes |
|
|
148 |
|
|
|
(16,047 |
) |
|
|
4,704 |
|
Net loss |
|
$ |
(154,740 |
) |
|
$ |
(24,010 |
) |
|
$ |
(76,350 |
) |
(1) |
Includes stock-based compensation, net of amounts capitalized as follows: |
|
|
Year Ended December 31, |
|
|||||||||
(in thousands) |
|
2018 |
|
|
2017 |
|
|
2016 |
|
|||
Cost of revenue |
|
$ |
8,931 |
|
|
$ |
2,503 |
|
|
$ |
4,114 |
|
Research and development |
|
|
48,739 |
|
|
|
9,918 |
|
|
|
5,756 |
|
Sales and marketing |
|
|
19,046 |
|
|
|
8,069 |
|
|
|
8,712 |
|
General and administrative |
|
|
55,054 |
|
|
|
14,496 |
|
|
|
12,301 |
|
Restructuring |
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
2,074 |
|
Stock-based compensation, net of amounts capitalized |
|
$ |
131,770 |
|
|
$ |
34,986 |
|
|
$ |
32,957 |
|
(2) |
Includes amortization of acquisition intangible assets as follows: |
|
|
Year Ended December 31, |
|
|||||||||
(in thousands) |
|
2018 |
|
|
2017 |
|
|
2016 |
|
|||
Cost of revenue |
|
$ |
1,952 |
|
|
$ |
2,040 |
|
|
$ |
4,505 |
|
Sales and marketing |
|
|
2,318 |
|
|
|
2,421 |
|
|
|
4,267 |
|
Amortization of acquisition intangible assets |
|
$ |
4,270 |
|
|
$ |
4,461 |
|
|
$ |
8,772 |
|
50
|
|
Year Ended December 31, |
|
|||||||||
|
|
2018 |
|
|
2017 |
|
|
2016 |
|
|||
Revenue |
|
|
100 |
% |
|
|
100 |
% |
|
|
100 |
% |
Cost of revenue |
|
|
31 |
% |
|
|
29 |
% |
|
|
33 |
% |
Gross profit |
|
|
69 |
% |
|
|
71 |
% |
|
|
67 |
% |
Operating expenses: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Research and development |
|
|
42 |
% |
|
|
25 |
% |
|
|
18 |
% |
Sales and marketing |
|
|
38 |
% |
|
|
34 |
% |
|
|
36 |
% |
General and administrative |
|
|
38 |
% |
|
|
22 |
% |
|
|
18 |
% |
Restructuring |
|
|
1 |
% |
|
|
1 |
% |
|
|
12 |
% |
Total operating expenses |
|
|
119 |
% |
|
|
81 |
% |
|
|
84 |
% |
Loss from operations |
|
|
(50 |
)% |
|
|
(10 |
)% |
|
|
(17 |
)% |
Interest expense |
|
|
11 |
% |
|
|
12 |
% |
|
|
16 |
% |
Other non-operating income (expense), net |
|
|
— |
% |
|
|
3 |
% |
|
|
(2 |
)% |
Loss before income taxes |
|
|
(61 |
)% |
|
|
(18 |
)% |
|
|
(35 |
)% |
Provision for (benefit from) income taxes |
|
|
— |
% |
|
|
(7 |
)% |
|
|
2 |
% |
Net loss |
|
|
(61 |
)% |
|
|
(11 |
)% |
|
|
(37 |
)% |
Comparison of the Year Ended December 31, 2018 and 2017
Revenue and cost of revenue
|
|
Year Ended December 31, |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||
(dollars in thousands) |
|
2018 |
|
|
2017 |
|
|
Change |
|
|
% Change |
|
||||
Revenue |
|
$ |
254,324 |
|
|
$ |
218,773 |
|
|
$ |
35,551 |
|
|
|
16 |
% |
Cost of revenue |
|
|
77,982 |
|
|
|
62,679 |
|
|
|
15,303 |
|
|
|
24 |
% |
Gross profit |
|
$ |
176,342 |
|
|
$ |
156,094 |
|
|
$ |
20,248 |
|
|
|
13 |
% |
Gross margin |
|
|
69 |
% |
|
|
71 |
% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Revenue increased for the year ended December 31, 2018 compared to the prior year, primarily due to a 12% increase in ARPU from $362 as of December 31, 2017 to $406 as of December 31, 2018, which was largely driven by a change to our individual user plans in 2017 that offered paying users new plans with more functionality and required our users to renew their subscriptions at higher price points. The increase in revenue was also due in part to a 7% increase in the number of paying users from 606,077 as of December 31, 2017 to 646,727 as of December 31, 2018. The increase in revenue was partially offset by a $4.8 million decrease in revenue related to our having ceased offering the non-self-serve version of our SurveyMonkey Audience solution at the end of the second quarter of 2017. During the year ended December 31, 2018, we generated over 75% of our revenue from individuals and organizations that were customers in 2017, with the remainder of our revenue coming from new customers.
Cost of revenue increased for the year ended December 31, 2018 compared to the prior year, primarily due to an $11.2 million increase in personnel costs (including stock-based compensation of $6.7 million), due to headcount growth and the vesting of the Performance RSUs, which occurred upon the effectiveness of the registration statement for our IPO, a $1.0 million increase in depreciation and a $1.2 million increase in payment processing expenses due to increased sales.
As a result of the increase in our cost of revenue, our gross margin decreased for the year ended December 31, 2018 as compared to the prior year.
51
|
|
Year Ended December 31, |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||
(dollars in thousands) |
|
2018 |
|
|
2017 |
|
|
Change |
|
|
% Change |
|
||||
Research and development |
|
$ |
106,188 |
|
|
$ |
53,660 |
|
|
$ |
52,528 |
|
|
|
98 |
% |
Research and development expenses increased for the year ended December 31, 2018 compared to the prior year, primarily due to a $44.4 million increase in personnel costs (including stock-based compensation of $37.6 million), due to headcount growth and the vesting of the Performance RSUs, which occurred upon the effectiveness of the registration statement for our IPO, a $1.1 million increase in depreciation, and a decrease in the software development costs that qualified for capitalization of $6.5 million.
Sales and marketing
|
|
Year Ended December 31, |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||
(dollars in thousands) |
|
2018 |
|
|
2017 |
|
|
Change |
|
|
% Change |
|
||||
Sales and marketing |
|
$ |
95,783 |
|
|
$ |
73,511 |
|
|
$ |
22,272 |
|
|
|
30 |
% |
Sales and marketing expenses increased for the year ended December 31, 2018 compared to the prior year, primarily due to a $15.6 million increase in personnel costs (including stock-based compensation of $11.0 million), due to headcount growth and the vesting of the Performance RSUs, which occurred upon the effectiveness of the registration statement for our IPO, an increase of $6.2 million in costs related to brand campaigns and paid marketing.
General and administrative
|
|
Year Ended December 31, |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||
(dollars in thousands) |
|
2018 |
|
|
2017 |
|
|
Change |
|
|
% Change |
|
||||
General and administrative |
|
$ |
97,339 |
|
|
$ |
47,940 |
|
|
$ |
49,399 |
|
|
|
103 |
% |
General and administrative expenses increased for the year ended December 31, 2018 compared to the prior year, primarily due to a $47.2 million increase in personnel costs (including stock-based compensation of $41.0 million), due to headcount growth and the vesting of the Performance RSUs which occurred upon the effectiveness of the registration statement for our IPO and a $1.7 million increase in outside legal, accounting and other professional fees related primarily to adoption of the new revenue standard, ASC 606, and preparation for becoming a public company, as well as an increase of $1.7 million in facilities costs. In addition, we incurred $3.2 million of transaction fees during the year ended December 31, 2017 related to our 2017 Credit Facility as compared to $0.9 million incurred during the year ended December 31, 2018, related to our 2018 Credit Facility.
Restructuring
|
|
Year Ended December 31, |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||
(dollars in thousands) |
|
2018 |
|
|
2017 |
|
|
Change |
|
|
% Change |
|
||||
Restructuring |
|
$ |
3,525 |
|
|
$ |
1,785 |
|
|
$ |
1,740 |
|
|
|
97 |
% |
Restructuring expenses increased for the year ended December 31, 2018 compared to the prior year, primarily due to the $2.8 million write-off of leasehold improvements related to our November 2017 Restructuring Plan.
52
|
|
Year Ended December 31, |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||
(dollars in thousands) |
|
2018 |
|
|
2017 |
|
|
Change |
|
|
% Change |
|
||||
Interest expense |
|
$ |
27,801 |
|
|
$ |
26,865 |
|
|
$ |
936 |
|
|
|
3 |
% |
Interest expense increased for the year ended December 31, 2018 compared to the prior year, primarily due to higher average interest rates. We expect future interest expense to decrease resulting from the repayment of a portion of our outstanding indebtedness under our credit facilities and our adoption of the new leasing standard, ASC 842. For additional information regarding our credit facilities and financing obligations, see Notes 8 and 9, respectively, of the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements included elsewhere in this Annual Report on Form 10-K.
Other non-operating income, net
|
|
Year Ended December 31, |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||
(dollars in thousands) |
|
2018 |
|
|
2017 |
|
|
Change |
|
|
% Change |
|
||||
Other non-operating income (expense), net |
|
$ |
(298 |
) |
|
$ |
7,610 |
|
|
$ |
(7,908 |
) |
|
|
(104 |
)% |
Other non-operating income, net decreased for the year ended December 31, 2018 compared to the prior year, primarily due to a decrease of $5.6 million gain on our sale of a private company investment, an increase in foreign currency losses of $1.5 million, an increase in loss on debt refinancing of $0.8 million, partially offset by an increase in interest income of $1.1 million resulting from higher average cash balances.
Provision for income taxes
|
|
Year Ended December 31, |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||
(dollars in thousands) |
|
2018 |
|
|
2017 |
|
|
Change |
|
|
% Change |
|
||||
Provision for (benefit from) income taxes |
|
$ |
148 |
|
|
$ |
(16,047 |
) |
|
$ |
16,195 |
|
|
|
(101 |
)% |
Effective tax rate |
|
|
— |
|
|
|
40 |
% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The provision for income taxes increased for the year ended December 31, 2018 compared to the prior year, primarily due to certain provisions in the Tax Act, including a decrease in the U.S. statutory tax rate from 35% to 21% and changes to our valuation allowance.
Comparison of the Year Ended December 31, 2017 and 2016
Revenue and cost of revenue
|
|
Year Ended December 31, |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||
(dollars in thousands) |
|
2017 |
|
|
2016 |
|
|
Change |
|
|
% Change |
|
||||
Revenue |
|
$ |
218,773 |
|
|
$ |
207,295 |
|
|
$ |
11,478 |
|
|
|
6 |
% |
Cost of revenue |
|
|
62,679 |
|
|
|
67,755 |
|
|
|
(5,076 |
) |
|
|
(7 |
)% |
Gross profit |
|
$ |
156,094 |
|
|
|
139,540 |
|
|
$ |
16,554 |
|
|
|
12 |
% |
Gross margin |
|
|
71 |
% |
|
|
67 |
% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Revenue increased for the year ended December 31, 2017 compared to the prior year primarily due to a 5% increase the number of paying users from 574,872 in 2016 to 606,077 in 2017. The increase in revenue was also due in part to a 4% increase in ARPU from $349 in 2016 to $362 in 2017, which was largely driven by a change to our individual user plans in 2017 that offered paying users new plans with more functionality and required our users to renew their subscriptions at higher price points. The increase in revenue was partially offset by a $10.5 million decrease in revenue relating to us having ceased offering our non-self-serve version of our SurveyMonkey Audience solution at the end of the second quarter of 2017. During the year ended December 31, 2017, we
53
generated over 75% of our revenue from individuals and organizations that were customers in 2016, with the remainder of our revenue coming from new customers.
Cost of revenue decreased for the year ended December 31, 2017 compared to the prior year, primarily due to a $2.5 million decrease in amortization of developed technology due to the de-recognition of acquired intangibles, a $2.0 million decrease in external sample costs as we generally ceased offering our non-self-serve version of our SurveyMonkey Audience solution at the end of the second quarter of 2017, a $2.9 million decrease in personnel costs due to a decrease in headcount and a $1.2 million decrease in external services. These decreases were partially offset by increases of $2.2 million in the amortization of capitalized software, $0.7 million in facilities costs and $0.6 million in payment processing fees due to increased sales.
As a result of the increase in our revenue and the decrease in our cost of revenue, our gross margin increased for the year ended December 31, 2017 as compared to the prior year.
Research and development
|
|
Year Ended December 31, |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||
(dollars in thousands) |
|
2017 |
|
|
2016 |
|
|
Change |
|
|
% Change |
|
||||
Research and development |
|
$ |
53,660 |
|
|
$ |
37,985 |
|
|
$ |
15,675 |
|
|
|
41 |
% |
Research and development expenses increased for the year ended December 31, 2017 compared to the prior year primarily due to an increase of $9.7 million in personnel costs due to headcount growth, a $2.6 million decrease in the software development costs that qualified for capitalization and a $3.7 million increase in facilities costs related to the relocation of our headquarters. These increases were partially offset by acquisition-related deferred compensation becoming fully amortized in 2016.
Sales and marketing
|
|
Year Ended December 31, |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||
(dollars in thousands) |
|
2017 |
|
|
2016 |
|
|
Change |
|
|
% Change |
|
||||
Sales and marketing |
|
$ |
73,511 |
|
|
$ |
73,970 |
|
|
$ |
(459 |
) |
|
|
(1 |
)% |
Sales and marketing expenses decreased for the year ended December 31, 2017 compared to the prior year, primarily due to decreases of $5.0 million in acquisition-related expenses due to deferred compensation related to past acquisitions becoming fully amortized in 2016, $1.8 million in intangible asset amortization due to certain acquired intangible assets becoming fully amortized in 2016, $1.0 million in commissions expense related to our non-self-serve version of SurveyMonkey Audience solution, which we generally ceased offering at the end of the second quarter of 2017, and $0.6 million in stock-based compensation due to employee terminations. These decreases were offset in part by increases of $4.2 million in costs related to brand campaigns and paid marketing, $3.2 million in facilities costs related to the relocation of our headquarters and $0.6 million in consulting services.
General and administrative
|
|
Year Ended December 31, |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||
(dollars in thousands) |
|
2017 |
|
|
2016 |
|
|
Change |
|
|
% Change |
|
||||
General and administrative |
|
$ |
47,940 |
|
|
$ |
36,832 |
|
|
$ |
11,108 |
|
|
|
30 |
% |
General and administrative expenses increased for the year ended December 31, 2017 compared to the prior year, primarily due to increases of $5.8 million in personnel costs due to headcount growth, $3.2 million in third-party fees related to the refinancing of our credit facilities, $1.2 million in facilities costs as a result of the relocation of our headquarters, and $0.5 million in outside legal, accounting and other professional fees, related primarily to the adoption of ASC 606 and preparation of our IPO.
54
|
|
Year Ended December 31, |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||
(dollars in thousands) |
|
2017 |
|
|
2016 |
|
|
Change |
|
|
% Change |
|
||||
Restructuring |
|
$ |
1,785 |
|
|
$ |
25,256 |
|
|
$ |
(23,471 |
) |
|
|
(93 |
)% |
Restructuring expenses decreased for the year ended December 31, 2017 compared to the prior year, primarily due to higher costs related to the March 2016 and November 2016 restructuring plans as compared to the November 2017 restructuring plan.
Interest expense
|
|
Year Ended December 31, |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||
(dollars in thousands) |
|
2017 |
|
|
2016 |
|
|
Change |
|
|
% Change |
|
||||
Interest expense |
|
$ |
26,865 |
|
|
$ |
32,893 |
|
|
$ |
(6,028 |
) |
|
|
(18 |
)% |
In the fourth quarter of 2016, we vacated the space for our previous headquarters. Upon vacating the previous headquarters facility, we no longer incurred any finance lease obligation costs relating to the previous headquarters facility in 2017. This reduction was partially offset by an increase in finance lease obligation costs associated with our new headquarters.
Other non-operating income, net
|
|
Year Ended December 31, |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||
(dollars in thousands) |
|
2017 |
|
|
2016 |
|
|
Change |
|
|
% Change |
|
||||
Other non-operating income (expense), net |
|
$ |
7,610 |
|
|
$ |
(4,250 |
) |
|
$ |
11,860 |
|
|
|
(279 |
)% |
Other non-operating income (expense), net increased for the year ended December 31, 2017 compared to the prior year, primarily due to our sale of a private company investment which resulted in a $6.7 million gain during the year ended December 31, 2017 as well as a $2.9 million decrease in foreign currency losses and translation adjustment resulting from the liquidation of one of our international subsidiaries and an increase related to an impairment of $2.2 million for a long-term note receivable during the year ended December 31, 2016. This increase was partially offset by the recovery of $1.0 million of the same long-term note receivable during the year ended December 31, 2017.
Provision for income taxes
|
|
Year Ended December 31, |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||
(dollars in thousands) |
|
2017 |
|
|
2016 |
|
|
Change |
|
|
% Change |
|
||||
Provision for (benefit from) income taxes |
|
$ |
(16,047 |
) |
|
$ |
4,704 |
|
|
$ |
(20,751 |
) |
|
|
(441 |
)% |
Effective tax rate |
|
|
40 |
% |
|
|
(7 |
)% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The decrease in our income tax provision during the year ended December 31, 2017 as compared to the prior year was primarily due to a partial release of valuation allowance in connection with the Tax Act and the decrease in the U.S. statutory rate from 35% to 21%. The tax benefit associated with the release of the valuation allowance was partially offset by income taxes in profitable jurisdictions outside of the United States.
Quarterly Results of Operations
The following tables show a summary of our unaudited quarterly statements of operations data for each of the four quarters of the years ended December 31, 2018 and 2017. The unaudited quarterly statements of operations data set forth below have been prepared on a basis consistent with our audited annual consolidated financial
55
statements included e lsewhere in this Annual Report on Form 10-K and include, in our opinion, all normal recurring adjustments necessary for the fair presentation of the results of operations for the periods presented , in accordance with GAAP . Our historical quarterly results are not necessarily indicative of the results that may be expected in any future period and the unaudited quarterly statements of operations data should be read in conjunction with our consolidated financial statements and the related notes thereto include d elsewhere in this Annual Report on Form 10-K . Percentages presented in the following tables may not sum due to rounding.
Quarterly periods in the year ended December 31, 2018
|
|
Three Months Ended |
|
|||||||||||||
(in thousands, except per share amounts) |
|
March 31, 2018 |
|
|
June 30, 2018 |
|
|
September 30, 2018 |
|
|
December 31, 2018 |
|
||||
Revenue |
|
$ |
58,491 |
|
|
$ |
62,696 |
|
|
$ |
65,205 |
|
|
$ |
67,932 |
|
Cost of revenue (1)(2) |
|
|
18,063 |
|
|
|
17,691 |
|
|
|
23,213 |
|
|
|
19,015 |
|
Gross profit |
|
|
40,428 |
|
|
|
45,005 |
|
|
|
41,992 |
|
|
|
48,917 |
|
Operating expenses: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Research and development (1) |
|
|
17,940 |
|
|
|
16,292 |
|
|
|
51,765 |
|
|
|
20,191 |
|
Sales and marketing (1)(2) |
|
|
17,421 |
|
|
|
19,879 |
|
|
|
34,309 |
|
|
|
24,174 |
|
General and administrative (1) |
|
|
13,018 |
|
|
|
13,400 |
|
|
|
50,391 |
|
|
|
20,530 |
|
Restructuring |
|
|
5 |
|
|
|
28 |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
3,492 |
|
Total operating expenses |
|
|
48,384 |
|
|
|
49,599 |
|
|
|
136,465 |
|
|
|
68,387 |
|
Loss from operations |
|
|
(7,956 |
) |
|
|
(4,594 |
) |
|
|
(94,473 |
) |
|
|
(19,470 |
) |
Interest expense |
|
|
7,094 |
|
|
|
7,591 |
|
|
|
7,496 |
|
|
|
5,620 |
|
Other non-operating income (expense), net |
|
|
633 |
|
|
|
(282 |
) |
|
|
(219 |
) |
|
|
(430 |
) |
Loss before income taxes |
|
|
(14,417 |
) |
|
|
(12,467 |
) |
|
|
(102,188 |
) |
|
|
(25,520 |
) |
Provision for (benefit from) income taxes |
|
|
300 |
|
|
|
(4 |
) |
|
|
174 |
|
|
|
(322 |
) |
Net loss |
|
$ |
(14,717 |
) |
|
$ |
(12,463 |
) |
|
$ |
(102,362 |
) |
|
$ |
(25,198 |
) |
Net loss per share, basic and diluted |
|
$ |
(0.15 |
) |
|
$ |
(0.12 |
) |
|
$ |
(0.99 |
) |
|
$ |
(0.20 |
) |
Weighted-average shares used in computing basic and diluted net loss per share |
|
|
101,212 |
|
|
|
101,623 |
|
|
|
103,096 |
|
|
|
125,454 |
|
(1) |
Includes stock-based compensation, net of amounts capitalized as follows: |
|
|
Three Months Ended |
|
|||||||||||||
(in thousands) |
|
March 31, 2018 |
|
|
June 30, 2018 |
|
|
September 30, 2018 |
|
|
December 31, 2018 |
|
||||
Cost of revenue |
|
$ |
658 |
|
|
$ |
646 |
|
|
$ |
6,472 |
|
|
$ |
1,155 |
|
Research and development |
|
|
3,447 |
|
|
|
2,966 |
|
|
|
37,490 |
|
|
|
4,836 |
|
Sales and marketing |
|
|
768 |
|
|
|
1,147 |
|
|
|
14,496 |
|
|
|
2,635 |
|
General and administrative |
|
|
3,667 |
|
|
|
3,993 |
|
|
|
40,354 |
|
|
|
7,040 |
|
Stock-based compensation, net of amounts capitalized |
|
$ |
8,540 |
|
|
$ |
8,752 |
|
|
$ |
98,812 |
|
|
$ |
15,666 |
|
( 2 ) |
Includes amortization of acquisition intangible assets as follows: |
|
|
Three Months Ended |
|
|||||||||||||
(in thousands) |
|
March 31, 2018 |
|
|
June 30, 2018 |
|
|
September 30, 2018 |
|
|
December 31, 2018 |
|
||||
Cost of revenue |
|
$ |
488 |
|
|
$ |
488 |
|
|
$ |
488 |
|
|
$ |
488 |
|
Sales and marketing |
|
|
604 |
|
|
|
604 |
|
|
|
565 |
|
|
|
545 |
|
Amortization of acquired intangible assets |
|
$ |
1,092 |
|
|
$ |
1,092 |
|
|
$ |
1,053 |
|
|
$ |
1,033 |
|
56
|
|
Three Months Ended |
|
|||||||||||||
(% of revenue) |
|
March 31, 2018 |
|
|
June 30, 2018 |
|
|
September 30, 2018 |
|
|
December 31, 2018 |
|
||||
Revenue |
|
|
100 |
% |
|
|
100 |
% |
|
|
100 |
% |
|
|
100 |
% |
Cost of revenue |
|
|
31 |
% |
|
|
28 |
% |
|
|
36 |
% |
|
|
28 |
% |
Gross profit |
|
|
69 |
% |
|
|
72 |
% |
|
|
64 |
% |
|
|
72 |
% |
Operating expenses: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Research and development |
|
|
31 |
% |
|
|
26 |
% |
|
|
79 |
% |
|
|
30 |
% |
Sales and marketing |
|
|
30 |
% |
|
|
32 |
% |
|
|
53 |
% |
|
|
36 |
% |
General and administrative |
|
|
22 |
% |
|
|
21 |
% |
|
|
77 |
% |
|
|
30 |
% |
Restructuring |
|
|
— |
% |
|
|
— |
% |
|
|
— |
% |
|
|
5 |
% |
Total operating expenses |
|
|
83 |
% |
|
|
79 |
% |
|
|
209 |
% |
|
|
101 |
% |
Loss from operations |
|
|
(14 |
)% |
|
|
(7 |
)% |
|
|
(145 |
)% |
|
|
(29 |
)% |
Interest expense |
|
|
12 |
% |
|
|
12 |
% |
|
|
11 |
% |
|
|
8 |
% |
Other non-operating income (expense), net |
|
|
1 |
% |
|
|
— |
% |
|
|
— |
% |
|
|
(1 |
)% |
Loss before income taxes |
|
|
(25 |
)% |
|
|
(20 |
)% |
|
|
(157 |
)% |
|
|
(38 |
)% |
Provision for (benefit from) income taxes |
|
|
1 |
% |
|
|
— |
% |
|
|
— |
% |
|
|
— |
% |
Net loss |
|
|
(25 |
)% |
|
|
(20 |
)% |
|
|
(157 |
)% |
|
|
(37 |
)% |
Quarterly periods in the year ended December 31, 2017
|
|
Three Months Ended |
|
|||||||||||||
(in thousands, except per share amounts) |
|
March 31, 2017 |
|
|
June 30, 2017 |
|
|
September 30, 2017 |
|
|
December 31, 2017 |
|
||||
Revenue |
|
$ |
52,934 |
|
|
$ |
53,518 |
|
|
$ |
55,309 |
|
|
$ |
57,012 |
|
Cost of revenue (2)(3) |
|
|
15,429 |
|
|
|
15,413 |
|
|
|
16,241 |
|
|
|
15,596 |
|
Gross profit |
|
|
37,505 |
|
|
|
38,105 |
|
|
|
39,068 |
|
|
|
41,416 |
|
Operating expenses: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Research and development (2) |
|
|
13,413 |
|
|
|
11,567 |
|
|
|
14,910 |
|
|
|
13,770 |
|
Sales and marketing (2)(3) |
|
|
17,142 |
|
|
|
19,771 |
|
|
|
18,878 |
|
|
|
17,720 |
|
General and administrative (2) |
|
|
10,321 |
|
|
|
13,808 |
|
|
|
11,169 |
|
|
|
12,642 |
|
Restructuring |
|
|
235 |
|
|
|
(90 |
) |
|
|
2 |
|
|
|
1,638 |
|
Total operating expenses |
|
|
41,111 |
|
|
|
45,056 |
|
|
|
44,959 |
|
|
|
45,770 |
|
Loss from operations |
|
|
(3,606 |
) |
|
|
(6,951 |
) |
|
|
(5,891 |
) |
|
|
(4,354 |
) |
Interest expense |
|
|
6,696 |
|
|
|
6,620 |
|
|
|
6,714 |
|
|
|
6,835 |
|
Other non-operating income (expense), net |
|
|
7,032 |
|
|
|
144 |
|
|
|
774 |
|
|
|
(340 |
) |
Loss before income taxes |
|
|
(3,270 |
) |
|
|
(13,427 |
) |
|
|
(11,831 |
) |
|
|
(11,529 |
) |
Provision for (benefit from) income taxes |
|
|
1,045 |
|
|
|
1,355 |
|
|
|
1,151 |
|
|
|
(19,598 |
) |
Net (loss) income |
|
$ |
(4,315 |
) |
|
$ |
(14,782 |
) |
|
$ |
(12,982 |
) |
|
$ |
8,069 |
|
Net (loss) income per share, basic and diluted |
|
$ |
(0.04 |
) |
|
$ |
(0.15 |
) |
|
$ |
(0.13 |
) |
|
$ |
0.08 |
|
Weighted-average shares used in computing basic and diluted net (loss) income per share (1) |
|
|
99,634 |
|
|
|
99,938 |
|
|
|
100,584 |
|
|
|
100,804 |
|
(1) |
For the three months ended December 31, 2017, dilutive net income per share was calculated using 102,202 thousand weighted-average dilutive shares. |
57
|
|
Three Months Ended |
|
|||||||||||||
(in thousands) |
|
March 31, 2017 |
|
|
June 30, 2017 |
|
|
September 30, 2017 |
|
|
December 31, 2017 |
|
||||
Cost of revenue |
|
$ |
607 |
|
|
$ |
629 |
|
|
$ |
634 |
|
|
$ |
633 |
|
Research and development |
|
|
2,926 |
|
|
|
1,340 |
|
|
|
2,799 |
|
|
|
2,853 |
|
Sales and marketing |
|
|
2,181 |
|
|
|
3,119 |
|
|
|
1,322 |
|
|
|
1,447 |
|
General and administrative |
|
|
3,525 |
|
|
|
3,614 |
|
|
|
3,667 |
|
|
|
3,690 |
|
Stock-based compensation, net of amounts capitalized |
|
$ |
9,239 |
|
|
$ |
8,702 |
|
|
$ |
8,422 |
|
|
$ |
8,623 |
|
( 3 ) |
Includes amortization of acquisition intangible assets as follows: |
|
|
Three Months Ended |
|
|||||||||||||
(in thousands) |
|
March 31, 2017 |
|
|
June 30, 2017 |
|
|
September 30, 2017 |
|
|
December 31, 2017 |
|
||||
Cost of revenue |
|
$ |
576 |
|
|
$ |
488 |
|
|
$ |
488 |
|
|
$ |
488 |
|
Sales and marketing |
|
|
609 |
|
|
|
604 |
|
|
|
604 |
|
|
|
604 |
|
Amortization of acquired intangible assets |
|
$ |
1,185 |
|
|
$ |
1,092 |
|
|
$ |
1,092 |
|
|
$ |
1,092 |
|
|
|
Three Months Ended |
|
|||||||||||||
(% of revenue) |
|
March 31, 2017 |
|
|
June 30, 2017 |
|
|
September 30, 2017 |
|
|
December 31, 2017 |
|
||||
Revenue |
|
|
100 |
% |
|
|
100 |
% |
|
|
100 |
% |
|
|
100 |
% |
Cost of revenue |
|
|
29 |
% |
|
|
29 |
% |
|
|
29 |
% |
|
|
27 |
% |
Gross profit |
|
|
71 |
% |
|
|
71 |
% |
|
|
71 |
% |
|
|
73 |
% |
Operating expenses: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Research and development |
|
|
25 |
% |
|
|
22 |
% |
|
|
27 |
% |
|
|
24 |
% |
Sales and marketing |
|
|
32 |
% |
|
|
37 |
% |
|
|
34 |
% |
|
|
31 |
% |
General and administrative |
|
|
19 |
% |
|
|
26 |
% |
|
|
20 |
% |
|
|
22 |
% |
Restructuring |
|
|
— |
% |
|
|
— |
% |
|
|
— |
% |
|
|
3 |
% |
Total operating expenses |
|
|
78 |
% |
|
|
84 |
% |
|
|
81 |
% |
|
|
80 |
% |
Loss from operations |
|
|
(7 |
)% |
|
|
(13 |
)% |
|
|
(11 |
)% |
|
|
(8 |
)% |
Interest expense |
|
|
13 |
% |
|
|
12 |
% |
|
|
12 |
% |
|
|
12 |
% |
Other non-operating income (expense), net |
|
|
13 |
% |
|
|
— |
% |
|
|
1 |
% |
|
|
(1 |
)% |
Loss before income taxes |
|
|
(6 |
)% |
|
|
(25 |
)% |
|
|
(21 |
)% |
|
|
(20 |
)% |
Provision for (benefit from) income taxes |
|
|
2 |
% |
|
|
3 |
% |
|
|
2 |
% |
|
|
(34 |
)% |
Net (loss) income |
|
|
(8 |
)% |
|
|
(28 |
)% |
|
|
(23 |
)% |
|
|
14 |
% |
Quarterly Revenue Trends
Our revenue in each of the quarters presented increased sequentially for all subsequent periods primarily due to increases in ARPU and in the number of paying users. Revenue from the first and second quarters of 2017 were negatively affected as we generally ceased offering SurveyMonkey Audience as a sales-assisted solution by the end of the second quarter of 2017. Commencing with the third quarter of 2018, revenues were positively impacted with the introduction of SurveyMonkey Teams.
Quarterly Cost of Revenue and Gross Margin Trends
Our cost of revenue fluctuated in each of the quarters presented primarily due to the timing of releases of our product updates, which caused fluctuations in the amortization of capitalized software expenses, higher personnel costs due to headcount growth, higher stock-based compensation expenses related to Performance RSUs beginning in the third quarter of 2018, and reduced external samples costs related to our SurveyMonkey Audience product as we generally ceased offering sales-assisted solutions as of the end of the second quarter of 2017, which combined with fluctuations in our revenue caused our gross margins to also fluctuate.
58
Quarterly Operating Expenses Trends
Our quarterly operating expenses fluctuated in the quarters presented primarily due to changes in personnel costs, the timing and cost of our product development cycles, marketing programs and the impact of our restructuring plans. Except for the three months ended September 30, 2017, total costs and expenses increased sequentially for all periods presented, primarily due to the addition of headcount in connection with the expansion of our business. In addition, commencing with the third quarter of 2018, our total operating expenses increased as a result of higher stock-based compensation expenses resulting from the vesting of Performance RSUs that vested upon the effectiveness of our IPO (see “ —Significant Impacts of Stock-Based Compensation,” below for additional information).
|
• |
Research and development expenses fluctuated in the quarters presented primarily due to the variation in our product development cycles. |
|
• |
Sales and marketing expense fluctuated in the quarters presented primarily due to the timing of our marketing campaigns. The increase in sales and marketing expense during the second quarter of 2017 included expenses related to our global brand refresh campaign. |
|
• |
General and administrative expenses fluctuated in the quarters presented primarily due to increases in personnel costs and higher accounting and other professional fees in connection with preparing to be and operating as a public company and our implementation of the new revenue standard, ASC 606. |
|
• |
During 2018, our quarterly stock-based compensation expenses included within the respective operating expense line items has increased in the third and fourth quarters due to the vesting of Performance RSUs upon the effectiveness of our IPO. During 2017, our quarterly stock-based compensation expenses included within the respective operating expense line items has generally decreased due to employee terminations. |
|
• |
In April 2017, we executed the 2017 Credit Facility and interest expense has generally increased due to higher effective interest rates on our debt. In October 2018, we executed the 2018 Credit Facility and commencing with the fourth quarter of 2018, interest expense decreased due to lower effective interest rates on our debt. |
|
• |
The variation in other non-operating income (expense), net is generally due to foreign currency gains and losses. In addition, in the three months ended March 31, 2018 and 2017, we recognized a gain on the sale of a private company investment. |
Seasonality
We have historically experienced seasonality in terms of when we enter into subscription agreements with customers. We typically enter into a lower percentage of agreements with new customers, as well as renewal agreements with existing customers, during the summer months and during the holiday season in the second and fourth quarter of each year.
Liquidity and Capital Resources
As of December 31, 2018 and 2017, our principal sources of liquidity were cash and cash equivalents totaling $153.8 million and $35.3 million, respectively, all of which were bank deposits as well as cash to be received from customers and cash available under our credit facilities.
On September 28, 2018, we closed our IPO, in which we sold 17,250,000 shares of our common stock at a price to the public of $12.00 per share. Immediately subsequent to the closing of our IPO, Salesforce Ventures LLC purchased 3,333,333 shares of our common stock from us at $12.00 per share in a concurrent private placement. In the aggregate, we raised $225.3 million in net proceeds after deducting underwriters’ discounts and commissions and offering expenses. In October 2018, we entered into a Refinancing Facility Agreement, or the 2018 Credit Facility, comprising a $220.0 million term loan and $75.0 million revolving credit facility. Upon execution of the 2018 Credit Facility, we utilized a portion of our IPO proceeds to repay $101.3 million of debt outstanding under our previous credit facility. Since our inception, we have financed our operations primarily through sales of equity securities, including our recently completed IPO and concurrent private placement, and
59
payments received from our customers and our credit facilities in the form of revolving lines of credit. We believe our existing cash and cash equivalents, our credit facilities and cash provided by sales of our products will be sufficient to meet our working capital and capital expenditure needs for at least the next 12 months. Our future ca pital requirements will depend on many factors, including the timing and amount of cash received from customers, the timing and extent of spending to support research and development efforts, the expansion of sales and marketing activities, the introductio n of new and enhanced product offerings and the continuing market adoption of our products. We may in the future enter into arrangements to acquire or invest in complementary businesses, services and technologies, including intellectual property rights. We may be required to seek additional equity or debt financing. In the event that additional financing is required from outside sources, we may not be able to raise it on terms acceptable to us or at all. If we are unable to raise additional capital or gener ate cash flows necessary to expand our operations and invest in new technologies, this could reduce our ability to compete successfully and harm our results of operations.
In February 2013, we entered into a credit agreement, or the 2013 Credit Facility, which was subsequently amended at various dates primarily to revise certain financial covenants and ratios, permit certain transactions, increase the facility and extend the maturity date. In April 2017, we entered into a refinancing facility agreement, or the 2017 Credit Facility, consisting of a $300.0 million term loan and $75.0 million revolving credit facility. Upon execution of the 2017 Credit Facility, the term loan under the 2013 Credit Facility was substantially modified and partially extinguished.
In October 2018, we entered into the 2018 Credit Facility, comprising a $220.0 million term loan, or the Term Loan, and $75.0 million revolving credit facility. Upon execution of the 2018 Credit Facility, the term loan under the 2017 Credit Facility was substantially modified. Loans under the 2018 Credit Facility accrue interest based upon, at our option, either an alternate base interest rate, or ABR, or a Eurocurrency rate, in each case plus an applicable margin. The applicable margin for the Term Loan is 2.75% in the case of a ABR loan and 3.75% in the case of a Eurocurrency loan, and the applicable margin for the revolving loan ranges from 0.75% to 1.50% in the case of a ABR loan and 1.75% to 2.50% in the case of a Eurocurrency loan, and is based on our leverage ratio. Periodic principal payments of $550,000 are due quarterly on the Term Loans with any remaining principal amounts due on October 10, 2025. The principal amount on the revolving credit facility is due and all revolver commitments terminate on October 10, 2023.
A significant majority of our customers pay in advance for annual subscriptions, which is a substantial source of cash. Deferred revenue consists of the unearned portion of billed fees for our subscriptions, which we recognized as revenue in accordance with our revenue recognition policy. As of December 31, 2018, we had deferred revenue of $101.5 million, a substantial majority of which we expect to record as revenue in the next 12 months, provided all other revenue recognition criteria have been met. As of December 31, 2017, we had deferred revenue of $85.1 million, of which $83.3 million was recognized into revenue in 2018 after all revenue recognition criteria had been met.
Cash Flows
The following table summarizes our cash flows for the periods indicated:
|
|
Year Ended December 31, |
|
|||||||||
(in thousands) |
|
2018 |
|
|
2017 |
|
|
2016 |
|
|||
Net cash provided by operating activities |
|
$ |
45,372 |
|
|
$ |
45,026 |
|
|
$ |
35,842 |
|
Net cash used in investing activities |
|
|
(21,034 |
) |
|
|
(32,354 |
) |
|
|
(46,903 |
) |
Net cash provided by (used in) financing activities |
|
|
95,475 |
|
|
|
(614 |
) |
|
|
614 |
|
Effects of exchange rate changes on cash |
|
|
(787 |
) |
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
Net increase (decrease) in cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash |
|
$ |
119,026 |
|
|
$ |
12,058 |
|
|
$ |
(10,447 |
) |
60
Cash Flows from Operating Activities
Our largest source of operating cash is cash collections from our customers for subscriptions to our products. Our primary uses of cash in operating activities are for employee-related expenditures, marketing expenses and third-party hosting costs. Historically, we have generated positive cash flows from operating activities. Net cash provided by operating activities is impacted by our net loss adjusted for certain non-cash items, including depreciation and amortization expenses, stock-based compensation, the derecognition of goodwill and intangible assets in 2016, deferred income taxes, as well as the effect of changes in operating assets and liabilities.
During the year ended December 31, 2018, cash provided by operating activities was $45.4 million, primarily due to our net loss of $154.7 million, adjusted for non-cash charges of $183.9 million and net cash inflows of $16.2 million provided by changes in our operating assets and liabilities. Non-cash charges primarily consisted of depreciation and amortization of property and equipment, capitalized internal-use software and intangible assets, and stock-based compensation. The primary drivers of the changes in operating assets and liabilities related to cash provided by a $16.4 million increase in deferred revenue, a $5.2 million increase in accrued compensation and a $3.6 million increase in accounts payable and accrued liabilities, partially offset by cash used for prepaid expenses and other assets of $5.6 million, as well as an increase in accounts receivable of $2.0 million and a decrease of $1.4 million in accrued interest on financing lease obligation.
During the year ended December 31, 2017, cash provided by operating activities was $45.0 million, primarily due to our net loss of $24.0 million, adjusted for non-cash charges of $54.0 million and net cash inflows of $15.0 million provided by changes in our operating assets and liabilities. Non-cash charges primarily consisted of depreciation and amortization of property and equipment, capitalized internal-use software and intangible assets, stock-based compensation and deferred income taxes. The primary drivers of the changes in operating assets and liabilities related to cash provided by an $8.6 million increase in deferred revenue, as well as increases in accrued interest on financing lease obligation of $4.6 million and in accrued compensation of $2.3 million, partially offset by cash used for accounts payable and accrued liabilities of $2.1 million. Additionally, the change in operating assets and liabilities was due to an increase of $1.5 million in accounts receivable and prepaid expenses and other assets.
During the year ended December 31, 2016, cash provided by operating activities was $35.8 million, primarily due to our net loss of $76.4 million, adjusted for non-cash charges of $94.7 million and net cash inflows of $17.5 million provided by changes in our operating assets and liabilities. Non-cash charges primarily consisted of depreciation and amortization of property and equipment, capitalized internal-use software and intangible assets, stock-based compensation, impairment of goodwill and intangible assets, deferred income tax and amortization of debt discount and issuance costs. The primary drivers of the changes in operating assets and liabilities related to an $8.7 million increase in accounts payable and accrued liabilities, a $6.9 million increase in accrued interest on financing lease obligation and a $4.6 million increase in deferred revenue, partially offset by a $3.5 million decrease in prepaid expenses and other assets. Additionally, the change in operating assets and liabilities was due to an increase of $0.8 million in accrued compensation.
Cash Flows from Investing Activities
Our primary investing activities have consisted of capital expenditures to purchase equipment necessary to support our data center facilities and our network and other operations and capitalization of internal-use software necessary to deliver significant new features and functionality in our survey platform which provides value to our customers. As our business grows, we expect our capital expenditures to continue to increase.
Net cash used in investing activities during the year ended December 31, 2018 of $21.0 million was primarily attributable to purchases of property and equipment of $10.0 million to support additional office space and headcount, and the capitalization of internal-use software costs of $12.0 million associated with the development of additional features and functionality of our platform, which was partially offset by proceeds from the sales of investment in privately held companies and other property of $1.0 million.
61
Net cash used in investing activities during the year ended December 31, 2017 of $3 2.4 million was primarily attributable to purchases of property and equipment of $32.5 million to support additional office space and headcount, and the capitalization of internal-use software costs of $15.3 million associated with the development of addit ional features and functionality of our platform, which was partially offset by proceeds from the sales of investment in privately held companies and other property of $15.5 million.
Net cash used in investing activities during the year ended December 31, 2016 of $46.9 million was primarily attributable to purchases of property and equipment of $30.4 million to support additional office space and headcount, and the capitalization of internal-use software costs of $15.8 million associated with the development of additional features and functionality of our platform.
Cash Flows from Financing Activities
Cash provided by financing activities during the year ended December 31, 2018 of $95.5 million was primarily attributable to aggregate net proceeds from the completion of our IPO of $232.5 million and proceeds from the exercise of stock options of $0.5 million, offset by $7.2 million in payments related to deferred offering costs, cash paid of $25.8 million for the satisfaction of tax withholding obligations for the release of RSUs, principal payments on our credit facilities of $104.1 million and payment of debt issuance costs of $0.5 million.
Cash used in financing activities during the year ended December 31, 2017 of $0.6 million was primarily the result of cash paid of $6.9 million for the satisfaction of tax withholding obligations for the release of RSUs, net cash paid of $2.1 million related to the refinancing of our credit facilities, partially offset by cash proceeds of $8.4 million for tenant improvement reimbursements under our financing lease.
Cash provided by financing activities during the year ended December 31, 2016 of $0.6 million was primarily due to cash proceeds of $21.9 million net of repayments related to the refinancing of our credit facilities, $5.5 million of tenant improvement reimbursements under our financing lease and $0.2 million from stock option exercises, partially offset by cash paid of $11.9 million for the satisfaction of certain tax withholding obligations for the release of RSUs and $15.1 million related to our acquisition of TechValidate (as such consideration was contingent and payment was not made soon after the acquisition date).
Contractual Obligations
Our principal commitments consist of obligations under our credit facilities leases for office space. As of December 31, 2018, the future non-cancelable minimum payments under these commitments were as follows:
|
|
Payments Due by Period |
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
(in thousands) |
|
Total |
|
|
2019 |
|
|
2020 |
|
|
2021 |
|
|
2022 |
|
|
2023 |
|
|
Thereafter |
|
|||||||
Credit facilities (1) |
|
$ |
219,450 |
|
|
$ |
2,200 |
|
|
$ |
2,200 |
|
|
$ |
2,200 |
|
|
$ |
2,200 |
|
|
$ |
2,200 |
|
|
$ |
208,450 |
|
Interest payments on credit facilities (1) |
|
|
89,019 |
|
|
|
13,521 |
|
|
|
13,422 |
|
|
|
13,249 |
|
|
|
13,113 |
|
|
|
12,977 |
|
|
|
22,737 |
|
Facility leases (2) |
|
|
133,226 |
|
|
|
13,793 |
|
|
|
13,435 |
|
|
|
12,217 |
|
|
|
12,284 |
|
|
|
12,716 |
|
|
|
68,781 |
|
Total contractual obligations |
|
$ |
441,695 |
|
|
$ |
29,514 |
|
|
$ |
29,057 |
|
|
$ |
27,666 |
|
|
$ |
27,597 |
|
|
$ |
27,893 |
|
|
$ |
299,968 |
|
(1) |
Represents the principal balances and related interest payments to be paid in connection with our 2018 Credit Facility. Interest payments on our 2018 Credit Facility are based upon the applicable interest rates as of December 31, 2018 and are subject to change in future periods. For additional information regarding our credit facilities, see Note 9 of the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements included elsewhere in this Annual Report on Form 10-K. |
(2) |
Primarily represents financing obligation payments on corporate headquarters as well and lease payments on our other facilities. The amounts above exclude expected sublease payments to be received of approximately $12.5 million. Additionally, we have approximately $0.9 million in facility obligations, net of estimated sublease income, for certain vacated locations in accrued restructuring on our consolidated balance sheets at December 31, 2018. For additional information regarding our facility lease obligations, see Note 8 of the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements included elsewhere in this Annual Report on Form 10-K. |
In addition to commitments above, we have open non-cancellable purchase orders for the procurement of goods and services in the ordinary course of business totaling $15.7 million to be received through 2021.
62
Significant Impacts of Stock-Based Compensation
In the second quarter of 2015, we began granting Performance RSUs that vest upon the satisfaction of both a service condition and a performance vesting condition, which performance vesting condition occurred upon the effectiveness of the registration statement for our IPO on September 25, 2018. As a result, we recognized the cumulative amount of unrecognized stock-based compensation expense of $89.9 million for services already rendered using the accelerated attribution method. As a result, our stock-based compensation expense for the year ended December 31, 2018 was significantly higher relative to any prior reporting period when such expense was not recognized. As of December 31, 2018, the remaining unamortized stock-based compensation related to Performance RSUs was $27.6 million, which we expect to recognize on an accelerated basis over the remaining weighted-average requisite service periods of 1.5 years. See Notes 1, 2 and 7 of the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements included elsewhere in this Annual Report on Form 10-K for additional information regarding our stock-based compensation accounting policy and information about our equity incentive plans.
Off-Balance Sheet Arrangements
As of December 31, 2018, we did not have any relationships with unconsolidated organizations or financial partnerships, such as structured finance or special purpose entities, which would have been established for the purpose of facilitating off-balance sheet arrangements or other contractually narrow or limited purposes.
Segment Information
We operate as a single operating segment. Our chief operating decision maker, or CODM, is our Chief Executive Officer, who reviews our operating results on a consolidated basis in order to make decisions about allocating resources and assessing performance for the entire company. Our CODM uses one measure of profitability and does not segment our business for internal reporting.
Critical Accounting Policies and Estimates
We prepare our consolidated financial statements in accordance with GAAP. In the preparation of these consolidated financial statements, we are required to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets, liabilities, revenue, costs and expenses and related disclosures. To the extent that there are material differences between these estimates and actual results, our financial condition or results of operations would be affected. We base our estimates on past experience and other assumptions that we believe are reasonable under the circumstances, and we evaluate these estimates on an ongoing basis. We refer to accounting estimates of this type as critical accounting policies and estimates, which we discuss below.
In May 2014, the FASB issued ASU 2014-09, Revenue from Contracts with Customers, or ASC 606. ASC 606, as modified through other ASUs issued subsequent to ASU 2014-09, supersedes all existing revenue recognition requirements and requires the recognition of revenue when promised goods or services are transferred to customers in an amount that reflects the consideration to which the entity expects to be entitled to in exchange for those goods or services. ASC 606 also includes Subtopic 340-40, Other Assets and Deferred Costs—Contracts with Customers, which requires the deferral of incremental costs of obtaining a contract with a customer.
On January 1, 2018, we adopted the requirements of ASC 606 using the full retrospective transition method. The primary impact of adopting ASC 606 relates to the deferral of incremental sales commissions incurred to obtain subscription contracts. Prior to the adoption of ASC 606, such costs were expensed as incurred. We amortize these costs on a straight-line basis over an estimated period of benefit, determined to be four years.
Revenue Recognition
We generate substantially all of our revenue from the sale of subscriptions to our survey software products including subscriptions to our purpose-built solutions. The revenue we generate from one purpose-built solution that is delivered and recognized at a point in time is not significant. We normally sell each of these products in separate contracts to our customers and each product, including purpose-built solutions, is distinct. Our policy is to exclude sales and other indirect taxes when measuring the transaction price of our subscription agreements. We account for revenue contracts with customers through the following steps:
63
|
• |
identification of the performance obligations in the contract; |
|
• |
determination of the transaction price; |
|
• |
allocation of the transaction price to the performance obligations in the contract; and |
|
• |
recognition of revenue when, or as, we satisfy a performance obligation. |
For subscription products, we provide customers the option of monthly, annual or multi-year contractual terms. In general, our customers elect contractual terms of one year or less. Subscription revenue is recognized on a daily basis ratably over the related subscription term. Access to our subscription product is an obligation representing a series of distinct services (and which comprise a single performance obligation) that we provide to our end customer over the subscription term. We recognize the majority of our revenue ratably because the customer benefits from access to our products throughout the subscription term.
We generally invoice our customers at the beginning of the term on a monthly or annual basis. Our contracts are generally non-cancellable and do not contain refund-type provisions. Our contracts do not contain a significant amount of variable consideration as the price of our subscription offerings are generally fixed at contract inception. Based on the invoicing structure and related subscription term, we determined our contracts do not contain a financing component. We applied the practical expedient in ASC 606 and did not evaluate contracts of one year or less for the existence of a significant financing component. Amounts that have been invoiced are recorded in accounts receivable and in deferred revenue or revenue, depending on whether transfer of control to customers has occurred.
We record contract liabilities to deferred revenue when cash payments are received or due. Deferred revenue consists of the unearned portion of customer billings.
Deferred Commissions
Certain commissions earned by our salesforce are considered to be incremental and recoverable costs of obtaining a contract with a customer. Such costs are deferred and amortized on a straight-line basis over their estimated period of benefit of generally four years. We estimated the period of benefit by considering factors such as historical customer attrition rates, the useful life of our technology and the impact of competition in our industry. There was no impairment loss in relation to the deferred costs for any period presented.
Stock-Based Compensation
We recognize stock-based compensation expense for all share-based payments to employees based on their estimated grant-date fair values determined in accordance with the provisions of ASC 718, Compensation-Stock Compensation . For time-based equity awards, stock-based compensation expense is recognized on a straight-line basis over the award’s requisite service period, which is generally four years for new hires and generally three years for subsequent grants to existing employees. For shares issuable under our employee stock purchase plan, or ESPP, stock-based compensation expense is recognized on a straight-line basis over the award’s requisite service period, which is the offering period. We recognize the fair value of our performance-based restricted stock units (which contain both a service condition and a Performance Vesting Condition) using the accelerated attribution method. We account for excess tax benefits from stock-based compensation expense in earnings, which are substantially offset by a valuation allowance. We also made a policy election to account for forfeitures as they occur.
We estimate the fair values of its stock options and shares issuable under our ESPP using the Black-Scholes-Merton option-pricing model for stock options granted at-the-money and Lattice-Binomial option valuation model for out-of-the-money stock option grants. We estimate fair value of our restricted stock units and restricted stock awards based on the fair value of the underlying common stock.
64
Determining the gr ant date fair value of stock options using the aforementioned valuation models requires management to make assumptions and judgments. If any of the assumptions used in the valuation models change significantly, stock-based compensation expense for future a wards may differ materially compared with the awards granted previously. The assumptions and estimates are as follows:
|
• |
Expected Term: As we do not have sufficient historical information to develop reasonable expectations about future exercise patterns and post-vesting employment termination behavior, we determine the expected term based on the average period the stock options are expected to remain outstanding, generally calculated as the midpoint of the stock options vesting term and contractual expiration period for awards granted at-the-money. For awards granted out-of-the-money, the expected term was adjusted to also consider the estimated period for those options to become in-the-money. |
|
• |
Expected Volatility: As we do not have sufficient trading history of our common stock, stock price volatility is estimated at the applicable grant date by taking the weighted-average historical volatility of a group of comparable publicly-traded companies over a period equal to the expected life of the options. |
|
• |
Expected Dividend Rate: We have not paid and do not anticipate paying cash dividends on our shares of common stock in the foreseeable future; therefore, the expected dividend yield is assumed to be zero. |
|
• |
Risk-Free Interest Rate: We determined the risk-free interest rate by using a weighted average assumption equivalent to the expected term based on the U.S. Treasury constant maturity rate as of the date of grant. |
Additionally, due to the absence of an active market for our common stock prior to our IPO, we obtained third-party valuations (prepared contemporaneously in connection with grants of share-based payments) to estimate the fair value of our common stock for purposes of measuring stock-based compensation expense to be recognized. The third-party valuations are prepared using methodologies, approaches and assumptions consistent with the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants, or AICPA, Accounting & Valuation Guide, Valuation of Privately-Held-Company Equity Securities Issued as Compensation . Additional factors considered in preparing the third-party valuations are as follows:
|
• |
market multiples of comparable public companies in our industry as indicated by their market capitalization and guideline merger and acquisition transactions; |
|
• |
our performance and market position relative to our competitors, who may change from time to time; |
|
• |
our historical financial results and estimated trends and prospects for our future performance; |
|
• |
the economic and competitive environment; |
|
• |
the likelihood and timeline of achieving a liquidity event, such as an IPO or sale of us, given prevailing market conditions; |
|
• |
any adjustments necessary to recognize a lack of marketability for our common stock; and |
|
• |
precedent sales of or offers to purchase our capital stock. |
Changes in the input assumptions outlined above can affect the fair value estimates used to measure stock-based compensation expense to be recognized.
In valuing our common stock, our board of directors determined the equity value of our company using both the income and market approaches. The income approach estimates value based on the future cash flows that a business expects to generate. These future cash flows are discounted to their present values using a rate of return appropriate for the risk of achieving the business’ projected cash flows. The present value of the estimated cash flows is then added to the present value of the residual value (if any) of the business at the end of the projected period to calculate the business enterprise value. The market approach estimates value based on a comparison of our company to comparable public companies or comparable transactions of companies in a similar line of business. A representative market multiple is determined based on the comparable public companies or transactions and then applied to our financial results to estimate the business enterprise value.
65
Prior to May 2018, the equity valuation was based on both the income and market approaches. For options granted starting in May 2018, we have used a probability weighted expected return method, or PWERM, to determine the fair value of our common stock. Under the PWERM, the value of equity securities are estimated based upon an analysis of future values for the enterprise, assuming various outcomes. Our approaches included the use of IPO scenarios and a scenario assuming continued operation as a private entity with a future exit.
Application of these approaches involves the use of estimates, judgment and assumptions that are highly complex and subjective, such as those regarding our expected future revenue, expenses and future cash flows, discount rates, market multiples, the selection of comparable companies, comparable transactions and the probability of possible future events. Changes in any or all of these estimates and assumptions or the relationships between those assumptions impact our valuations as of each valuation date and may have a material impact on the valuation of our common stock.
For valuations subsequent to our IPO, our board of directors determines the fair value of each share of underlying common stock based on the closing price of our common stock as reported on the date of the grant, for which there are no estimates or judgements.
Restricted Stock Units and Restricted Stock Awards
The fair value of the restricted stock units (including those that are performance-based) and restricted stock awards was determined based on the fair value of our common stock on the grant date.
Beginning in the second quarter of 2015, we granted RSUs that generally vest upon the satisfaction of both a service-based vesting condition and the Performance Vesting Condition, and compensation expense is recognized using the accelerated attribution method. The service-based vesting condition for these awards is generally satisfied over four years. The Performance Vesting Condition occurs on the earlier of (i) a public offering pursuant to a registration statement under the Securities Act on an active trading market or, for certain RSUs, the expiration of the lock-up period associated with such public offering and (ii) an acquisition or change in control of us or, for certain RSUs, an acquisition or change in control of us where the consideration paid for our stock is cash, publicly traded equity securities or a combination of both. The performance vesting condition occurred upon the effectiveness of the registration statement for our IPO on September 25, 2018. As a result, we recognized the cumulative amount of unrecognized stock-based compensation expense of $89.9 million for services already rendered using the accelerated attribution method. As of December 31, 2018, the remaining unamortized stock-based compensation related to Performance RSUs was $27.6 million, which we expect to recognize on an accelerated basis over the remaining weighted-average requisite service periods of 1.5 years.
Business Combination
When we acquire a business, the purchase consideration is allocated to the tangible assets acquired, liabilities assumed and intangible assets acquired based on their estimated respective fair values. The excess of the fair value of purchase consideration over the fair values of these identifiable assets and liabilities is recorded as goodwill. Such valuations require us to make significant estimates and assumptions, especially with respect to intangible assets. Significant estimates in valuing certain intangible assets include, but are not limited to, future expected cash flows from acquired users, acquired technology, and trade names from a market participant perspective, useful lives and discount rates. Our estimates of fair value are based upon assumptions believed to be reasonable, but which are inherently uncertain and unpredictable and, as a result, actual results may differ from estimates. During the measurement period, which is one year from the acquisition date, we may record adjustments to the assets acquired and liabilities assumed, with the corresponding offset to goodwill. Upon the conclusion of the measurement period, any subsequent adjustments are recorded to non-operating income (expense) in the consolidated statement of operations.
66
Impairment of Goodwill and Acquired Intangible Assets
Goodwill is not amortized but rather tested for impairment at least annually, or more frequently if events or changes in circumstances indicate that goodwill may be impaired. Goodwill impairment is recognized when the carrying value of goodwill exceeds our implied fair value. Goodwill is evaluated for impairment annually on November 1, and whenever events or changes in circumstances indicate the carrying value of goodwill may not be recoverable. Triggering events that may indicate impairment include, but are not limited to, a significant adverse change in customer demand or business climate or a significant decrease in expected cash flows.
Acquisition intangible assets consist primarily of technology, customer relationships and trade names. Purchased intangible assets are recorded at fair value on the date of acquisition and amortized over their estimated useful lives following the pattern in which the economic benefits of the assets will be consumed, generally straight-line. We continually evaluate whether events and circumstances have occurred that indicate the remaining estimated useful life of amortizable long-lived assets may warrant revision or that the remaining balance may not be recoverable. When factors indicate that acquisition intangible assets should be evaluated for possible impairment, we use an estimate of the related undiscounted future cash flows over the remaining life of the amortizable long-lived assets in measuring whether they are recoverable. If the estimated undiscounted future cash flows do not exceed the carrying value of the asset, a loss is recorded as the excess of the asset’s carrying value over its fair value.
We did not recognize any impairment of goodwill or intangible assets during each of the years ended December 31, 2018, 2017 and 2016.
Recent Accounting Pronouncements
See Note 2 of the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements included elsewhere in this Annual Report on Form 10-K for discussion of recently adopted accounting pronouncements and recently issued accounting pronouncements not yet adopted as of the date of this Annual Report on Form 10-K.
Item 7A. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk
We have operations both within the United States and internationally, and we are exposed to market risks in the ordinary course of our business. These risks include primarily interest rate and foreign currency exchange risks.
Foreign Currency Exchange Risk
The functional currency of our foreign subsidiaries is generally the U.S. dollar. Monetary assets and liabilities are remeasured using foreign currency exchange rates at the end of the period, and non-monetary assets are remeasured based on historical exchange rates. Gains and losses due to foreign currency are the result of either the remeasurement of subsidiary balances or transactions denominated in currencies other than the foreign subsidiaries’ functional currency and are included in other non-operating income (expense), net in the statement of operations.
We have foreign currency exchange risks related to our revenue and operating expenses denominated in currencies other than the U.S. dollar, principally the Euro, the British Pound Sterling, the Australian dollar, the Canadian dollar, the Japanese Yen and the Brazilian Real. The volatility of exchange rates depends on many factors that we cannot forecast with reliable accuracy. We have experienced and will continue to experience fluctuations in foreign exchange gains (losses) related to changes in foreign currency exchange rates. In the event our foreign currency denominated assets, liabilities, sales or expenses increase, our operating results may be more greatly affected by fluctuations in the exchange rates of the currencies in which we do business.
From time to time, we may enter into foreign currency derivative contracts to reduce the risk that our cash flows and earnings will be adversely affected by foreign currency exchange rate fluctuations. During the years ended December 31, 2018, 2017 and 2016, we did not have any material amount of derivative financial instruments. A hypothetical 10% change in foreign currency exchange rates for the years ended December 31, 2018, 2017 and 2016 applicable to our business would not have had a material impact on our consolidated financial statements.
67
As of December 31, 2018 and 2017, we had cash and cash equivalents of $153.8 million and $35.3 million, respectively, which consisted primarily of bank deposits. Interest-earning instruments carry a degree of interest rate risk. However, our historical interest income has not fluctuated significantly. We do not enter into investments for trading or speculative purposes and have not used any derivative financial instruments to manage our interest rate risk exposure. For the years ended December 31, 2018, 2017 and 2016, a hypothetical 10% change in interest rates would have not had a material impact on our financial statements.
As of December 31, 2018 and 2017, we had borrowings under our credit facilities comprising $219.5 million and $323.5 million aggregate principal value, respectively. Loans under the 2018 Credit Facility accrue interest based upon, at our option, either at an alternate base interest rate, or ABR, or a Eurocurrency rate, in each case plus an applicable margin. As of December 31, 2018, a 100 basis point increase in LIBOR would result in an increase in interest payments on our debt of $3.4 million.
68
Item 8. Financial Statemen ts and Supplementary Data
Index to Consolidated Financial Statements
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Page |
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70 |
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71 |
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72 |
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|
73 |
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74 |
|
|
75 |
|
|
76 |
69
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm
To the Stockholders and the Board of Directors of SVMK Inc.
Opinion on the Financial Statements
We have audited the accompanying consolidated balance sheets of SVMK Inc. (the Company) as of December 31, 2018 and 2017, the related consolidated statements of operations, comprehensive loss, stockholders' equity and cash flows for each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 2018, and the related notes (collectively referred to as the “consolidated financial statements”). In our opinion, the consolidated financial statements present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of the Company at December 31, 2018 and 2017, and the results of its operations and its cash flows for each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 2018, in conformity with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles.
Basis for Opinion
These financial statements are the responsibility of the Company's management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on the Company’s financial statements based on our audits. We are a public accounting firm registered with the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States) (PCAOB) and are required to be independent with respect to the Company in accordance with the U.S. federal securities laws and the applicable rules and regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission and the PCAOB.
We conducted our audits in accordance with the standards of the PCAOB. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material misstatement, whether due to error or fraud. The Company is not required to have, nor were we engaged to perform, an audit of its internal control over financial reporting. As part of our audits we are required to obtain an understanding of internal control over financial reporting but not for the purpose of expressing an opinion on the effectiveness of the Company's internal control over financial reporting. Accordingly, we express no such opinion.
Our audits included performing procedures to assess the risks of material misstatement of the financial statements, whether due to error or fraud, and performing procedures that respond to those risks. Such procedures included examining, on a test basis, evidence regarding the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. Our audits also included evaluating the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall presentation of the financial statements. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.
/s/ Ernst & Young LLP
We have served as the Company’s auditor since 2013.
San Francisco, California
February 26, 2019
70
(in thousands, except par value) |
|
December 31, 2018 |
|
|
December 31, 2017 |
|
||
Assets |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Current assets: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Cash and cash equivalents |
|
$ |
153,807 |
|
|
$ |
35,345 |
|
Accounts receivable, net of allowance of $115 and $50 |
|
|
7,336 |
|
|
|
5,429 |
|
Deferred commissions, current |
|
|
1,981 |
|
|
|
1,225 |
|
Prepaid expenses and other current assets |
|
|
7,081 |
|
|
|
5,056 |
|
Total current assets |
|
|
170,205 |
|
|
|
47,055 |
|
Property and equipment, net |
|
|
117,718 |
|
|
|
131,331 |
|
Capitalized internal-use software, net |
|
|
33,280 |
|
|
|
41,493 |
|
Acquisition intangible assets, net |
|
|
9,324 |
|
|
|
13,594 |
|
Goodwill, net |
|
|
336,861 |
|
|
|
336,861 |
|
Deferred commissions, non-current |
|
|
3,317 |
|
|
|
2,006 |
|
Other assets |
|
|
8,643 |
|
|
|
5,749 |
|
Total assets |
|
$ |
679,348 |
|
|
$ |
578,089 |
|
Liabilities and stockholders’ equity |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Current liabilities: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Accounts payable |
|
$ |
2,804 |
|
|
$ |
3,380 |
|
Accrued expenses and other current liabilities |
|
|
9,692 |
|
|
|
10,173 |
|
Accrued compensation |
|
|
20,070 |
|
|
|
14,910 |
|
Deferred revenue |
|
|
101,236 |
|
|
|
84,818 |
|
Debt, current |
|
|
1,900 |
|
|
|
2,032 |
|
Total current liabilities |
|
|
135,702 |
|
|
|
115,313 |
|
Deferred tax liabilities |
|
|
4,246 |
|
|
|
4,168 |
|
Debt, non-current |
|
|
215,515 |
|
|
|
316,289 |
|
Financing obligation on leased facility |
|
|
92,009 |
|
|
|
93,385 |
|
Other non-current liabilities |
|
|
12,493 |
|
|
|
8,891 |
|
Total liabilities |
|
|
459,965 |
|
|
|
538,046 |
|
Commitments and contingencies (Note 8) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Stockholders’ equity: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Preferred stock ($0.00001 par value; 100,000 shares authorized; no shares issued and outstanding) |
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
Common stock ($0.00001 par value; 800,000 shares authorized; 125,818 and 101,383 shares issued and outstanding) |
|
|
1 |
|
|
|
1 |
|
Additional paid-in capital |
|
|
551,937 |
|
|
|
217,594 |
|
Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) |
|
|
(287 |
) |
|
|
19 |
|
Accumulated deficit |
|
|
(332,268 |
) |
|
|
(177,571 |
) |
Total stockholders’ equity |
|
|
219,383 |
|
|
|
40,043 |
|
Total liabilities and stockholders’ equity |
|
$ |
679,348 |
|
|
$ |
578,089 |
|
See accompanying Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.
71
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
|
|
Year Ended December 31, |
|
|||||||||
(in thousands, except per share amounts) |
|
2018 |
|
|
2017 |
|
|
2016 |
|
|||
Revenue |
|
$ |
254,324 |
|
|
$ |
218,773 |
|
|
$ |
207,295 |
|
Cost of revenue (1)(2) |
|
|
77,982 |
|
|
|
62,679 |
|
|
|
67,755 |
|
Gross profit |
|
|
176,342 |
|
|
|
156,094 |
|
|
|
139,540 |
|
Operating expenses: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Research and development (1) |
|
|
106,188 |
|
|
|
53,660 |
|
|
|
37,985 |
|
Sales and marketing (1)(2) |
|
|
95,783 |
|
|
|
73,511 |
|
|
|
73,970 |
|
General and administrative (1) |
|
|
97,339 |
|
|
|
47,940 |
|
|
|
36,832 |
|
Restructuring (1) |
|
|
3,525 |
|
|
|
1,785 |
|
|
|
25,256 |
|
Total operating expenses |
|
|
302,835 |
|
|
|
176,896 |
|
|
|
174,043 |
|
Loss from operations |
|
|
(126,493 |
) |
|
|
(20,802 |
) |
|
|
(34,503 |
) |
Interest expense |
|
|
27,801 |
|
|
|
26,865 |
|
|
|
32,893 |
|
Other non-operating income (expense), net |
|
|
(298 |
) |
|
|
7,610 |
|
|
|
(4,250 |
) |
Loss before income taxes |
|
|
(154,592 |
) |
|
|
(40,057 |
) |
|
|
(71,646 |
) |
Provision for (benefit from) income taxes |
|
|
148 |
|
|
|
(16,047 |
) |
|
|
4,704 |
|
Net loss |
|
$ |
(154,740 |
) |
|
$ |
(24,010 |
) |
|
$ |
(76,350 |
) |
Net loss per share, basic and diluted |
|
$ |
(1.43 |
) |
|
$ |
(0.24 |
) |
|
$ |
(0.77 |
) |
Weighted-average shares used in computing basic and diluted net loss per share |
|
|
107,900 |
|
|
|
100,244 |
|
|
|
98,539 |
|
(1) |
Includes stock-based compensation, net of amounts capitalized as follows: |
|
|
Year Ended December 31, |
|
|||||||||
(in thousands) |
|
2018 |
|
|
2017 |
|
|
2016 |
|
|||
Cost of revenue |
|
$ |
8,931 |
|
|
$ |
2,503 |
|
|
$ |
4,114 |
|
Research and development |
|
|
48,739 |
|
|
|
9,918 |
|
|
|
5,756 |
|
Sales and marketing |
|
|
19,046 |
|
|
|
8,069 |
|
|
|
8,712 |
|
General and administrative |
|
|
55,054 |
|
|
|
14,496 |
|
|
|
12,301 |
|
Restructuring |
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
2,074 |
|
Stock-based compensation, net of amounts capitalized |
|
$ |
131,770 |
|
|
$ |
34,986 |
|
|
$ |
32,957 |
|
(2) |
Includes amortization of acquisition intangible assets as follows: |
|
|
Year Ended December 31, |
|
|||||||||
(in thousands) |
|
2018 |
|
|
2017 |
|
|
2016 |
|
|||
Cost of revenue |
|
$ |
1,952 |
|
|
$ |
2,040 |
|
|
$ |
4,505 |
|
Sales and marketing |
|
|
2,318 |
|
|
|
2,421 |
|
|
|
4,267 |
|
Amortization of acquisition intangible assets |
|
$ |
4,270 |
|
|
$ |
4,461 |
|
|
$ |
8,772 |
|
See accompanying Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.
72
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF COMPREHENSIVE LOSS
|
|
Year Ended December 31, |
|
|||||||||
(in thousands) |
|
2018 |
|
|
2017 |
|
|
2016 |
|
|||
Net loss |
|
$ |
(154,740 |
) |
|
$ |
(24,010 |
) |
|
$ |
(76,350 |
) |
Other comprehensive income (loss): |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Foreign currency translation gains (losses) (1) |
|
|
(306 |
) |
|
|
(68 |
) |
|
|
87 |
|
Currency translation adjustment upon subsidiary liquidation (1) |
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
1,397 |
|
Total other comprehensive income (loss) (1) |
|
|
(306 |
) |
|
|
(68 |
) |
|
|
1,484 |
|
Total comprehensive loss |
|
$ |
(155,046 |
) |
|
$ |
(24,078 |
) |
|
$ |
(74,866 |
) |
(1) |
Net of tax effect which was not material. |
See accompanying Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.
73
CONSOLI DATED STATEMENTS OF STOCKHOLDERS’ EQUITY
|
|
Common Stock |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||
(in thousands) |
|
Shares |
|
|
Amount |
|
|
Additional Paid-In Capital |
|
|
Accumulated Other Comprehensive Income (Loss) |
|
|
Accumulated Deficit |
|
|
Total Stockholders’ Equity |
|
||||||
December 31, 2015 |
|
|
98,874 |
|
|
$ |
1 |
|
|
$ |
159,180 |
|
|
$ |
(1,397 |
) |
|
$ |
(78,598 |
) |
|
$ |
79,186 |
|
Cumulative-effect adjustment upon adoption of ASC 606 |
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
1,387 |
|
|
|
1,387 |
|
Common stock issued upon stock option exercise |
|
|
46 |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
201 |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
201 |
|
Common stock issued upon vesting of restricted stock units, net of tax withholding |
|
|
1,566 |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
(11,934 |
) |
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
(11,934 |
) |
Stock-based compensation expense |
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
39,047 |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
39,047 |
|
Comprehensive income |
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
1,484 |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
1,484 |
|
Net loss |
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
(76,350 |
) |
|
|
(76,350 |
) |
December 31, 2016 |
|
|
100,486 |
|
|
|
1 |
|
|
|
186,494 |
|
|
|
87 |
|
|
|
(153,561 |
) |
|
|
33,021 |
|
Common stock issued upon stock option exercise |
|
|
35 |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
153 |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
153 |
|
Common stock issued upon vesting of restricted stock units, net of tax withholding |
|
|
879 |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
(6,934 |
) |
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
(6,934 |
) |
Repurchase of common stock |
|
|
(12 |
) |
|
|
— |
|
|
|
(144 |
) |
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
(144 |
) |
Forfeiture of restricted stock awards |
|
|
(5 |
) |
|
|
— |
|
|
|
(80 |
) |
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
(80 |
) |
Stock-based compensation expense |
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
38,105 |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
38,105 |
|
Comprehensive loss |
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
(68 |
) |
|
|
— |
|
|
|
(68 |
) |
Net loss |
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
(24,010 |
) |
|
|
(24,010 |
) |
December 31, 2017 |
|
|
101,383 |
|
|
|
1 |
|
|
|
217,594 |
|
|
|
19 |
|
|
|
(177,571 |
) |
|
|
40,043 |
|
Cumulative-effect adjustment upon adoption of ASU 2017-09 |
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
(43 |
) |
|
|
— |
|
|
|
43 |
|
|
|
— |
|
Issuance of common stock in connection with initial public offering and concurrent private placement, net of underwriting discounts and issuance costs |
|
|
20,583 |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
225,336 |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
225,336 |
|
Common stock issued upon stock option exercise |
|
|
82 |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
494 |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
494 |
|
Common stock issued upon vesting of restricted stock units, net of tax withholding |
|
|
3,771 |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
(25,807 |
) |
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
(25,807 |
) |
Repurchase of common stock |
|
|
(1 |
) |
|
|
— |
|
|
|
(16 |
) |
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
(16 |
) |
Stock-based compensation expense |
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
134,379 |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
134,379 |
|
Comprehensive loss |
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
(306 |
) |
|
|
— |
|
|
|
(306 |
) |
Net loss |
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
(154,740 |
) |
|
|
(154,740 |
) |
December 31, 2018 |
|
|
125,818 |
|
|
$ |
1 |
|
|
$ |
551,937 |
|
|
$ |
(287 |
) |
|
$ |
(332,268 |
) |
|
$ |
219,383 |
|
See accompanying Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.
74
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
|
|
Year Ended December 31, |
|
|||||||||
(in thousands) |
|
2018 |
|
|
2017 |
|
|
2016 |
|
|||
Cash flows from operating activities |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net loss |
|
$ |
(154,740 |
) |
|
$ |
(24,010 |
) |
|
$ |
(76,350 |
) |
Adjustments to reconcile net loss to net cash provided by operating activities: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Depreciation and amortization |
|
|
47,166 |
|
|
|
42,391 |
|
|
|
36,698 |
|
Stock-based compensation expense, net of amounts capitalized |
|
|
131,770 |
|
|
|
34,986 |
|
|
|
32,957 |
|
Amortization of debt discount and issuance costs |
|
|
902 |
|
|
|
876 |
|
|
|
1,879 |
|
Deferred income taxes |
|
|
(508 |
) |
|
|
(16,848 |
) |
|
|
4,420 |
|
Loss on debt extinguishment |
|
|
941 |
|
|
|
194 |
|
|
|
— |
|
Gain on sale of a private company investment |
|
|
(999 |
) |
|
|
(6,750 |
) |
|
|
— |
|
Impairment of property and equipment |
|
|
2,821 |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
Derecognition of goodwill and intangible assets |
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
15,895 |
|
Other |
|
|
1,798 |
|
|
|
(829 |
) |
|
|
2,870 |
|
Changes in assets and liabilities: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Accounts receivable |
|
|
(1,958 |
) |
|
|
675 |
|
|
|
27 |
|
Prepaid expenses and other assets |
|
|
(5,565 |
) |
|
|
867 |
|
|
|
(3,508 |
) |
Accounts payable and accrued liabilities |
|
|
3,564 |
|
|
|
(2,061 |
) |
|
|
8,682 |
|
Accrued interest on financing lease obligation, net of payments |
|
|
(1,376 |
) |
|
|
4,580 |
|
|
|
6,924 |
|
Accrued compensation |
|
|
5,203 |
|
|
|
2,327 |
|
|
|
783 |
|
Deferred revenue |
|
|
16,353 |
|
|
|
8,628 |
|
|
|
4,565 |
|
Net cash provided by operating activities |
|
|
45,372 |
|
|
|
45,026 |
|
|
|
35,842 |
|
Cash flows from investing activities |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Purchases of property and equipment |
|
|
(9,981 |
) |
|
|
(32,488 |
) |
|
|
(30,419 |
) |
Capitalized internal-use software |
|
|
(12,052 |
) |
|
|
(15,319 |
) |
|
|
(15,834 |
) |
Proceeds from sale of a private company investment and other |
|
|
999 |
|
|
|
15,453 |
|
|
|
(650 |
) |
Net cash used in investing activities |
|
|
(21,034 |
) |
|
|
(32,354 |
) |
|
|
(46,903 |
) |
Cash flows from financing activities |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Proceeds from initial public offering, net of underwriters' discounts and concurrent private placement |
|
|
232,509 |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
Payments of deferred offering costs |
|
|
(7,173 |
) |
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
Proceeds from stock option exercises |
|
|
494 |
|
|
|
153 |
|
|
|
201 |
|
Employee payroll taxes paid for net share settlement of restricted stock units |
|
|
(25,807 |
) |
|
|
(6,934 |
) |
|
|
(11,934 |
) |
Payments to repurchase common stock |
|
|
(16 |
) |
|
|
(144 |
) |
|
|
— |
|
Payment of deferred acquisition purchase consideration |
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
(15,079 |
) |
Proceeds from term and revolving debt issuance |
|
|
— |
|
|
|
298,500 |
|
|
|
25,000 |
|
Repayment of debt |
|
|
(104,050 |
) |
|
|
(298,883 |
) |
|
|
(3,090 |
) |
Payment of debt issuance costs and other |
|
|
(482 |
) |
|
|
(1,666 |
) |
|
|
— |
|
Proceeds from tenant improvement allowances under lease financing obligation |
|
|
— |
|
|
|
8,360 |
|
|
|
5,516 |
|
Net cash provided by (used in) financing activities |
|
|
95,475 |
|
|
|
(614 |
) |
|
|
614 |
|
Effect of exchange rate changes on cash |
|
|
(787 |
) |
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
Net increase (decrease) in cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash |
|
|
119,026 |
|
|
|
12,058 |
|
|
|
(10,447 |
) |
Cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash at beginning of period |
|
|
35,345 |
|
|
|
23,287 |
|
|
|
33,734 |
|
Cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash at end of period |
|
$ |
154,371 |
|
|
$ |
35,345 |
|
|
$ |
23,287 |
|
Supplemental cash flow data: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Interest paid for term debt |
|
$ |
20,466 |
|
|
$ |
19,864 |
|
|
$ |
19,828 |
|
Interest paid for financing obligation on leased facility |
|
$ |
8,152 |
|
|
$ |
2,038 |
|
|
$ |
6,908 |
|
Income taxes paid |
|
$ |
535 |
|
|
$ |
547 |
|
|
$ |
1,419 |
|
Non-cash investing and financing transactions: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Stock compensation included in capitalized software costs |
|
$ |
2,609 |
|
|
$ |
3,119 |
|
|
$ |
5,867 |
|
Accrued unpaid capital expenditures |
|
$ |
322 |
|
|
$ |
1,214 |
|
|
$ |
9,343 |
|
Reconciliation of cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Cash and cash equivalents |
|
$ |
153,807 |
|
|
$ |
35,345 |
|
|
$ |
23,287 |
|
Restricted cash (included in other assets) |
|
|
564 |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
Total cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash at end of period |
|
$ |
154,371 |
|
|
$ |
35,345 |
|
|
$ |
23,287 |
|
See accompanying Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.
75
NOTES TO CON SOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
1. Company Overview and Basis of Presentation
Business
SVMK Inc. (the “Company”) is a global provider of survey software products. The Company was incorporated in 2011 as a Delaware corporation and is the successor to operations originally begun in 1999. The Company’s headquarters are located in the United States and its international operations are primarily based in Ireland and Canada.
Principles of Consolidation and Basis of Presentation
The accompanying consolidated financial statements are prepared in accordance with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles (“GAAP”) and include the results of operations of the Company and its wholly-owned subsidiaries. All significant intercompany transactions have been eliminated. Certain other prior year balances have been reclassified to conform to the current year presentation. Such reclassifications did not affect total revenues, operating income or net income.
On January 1, 2018, the Company adopted the requirements of Financial Accounting Standards Board (“FASB”) Accounting Standards Update (“ASU”) 2014-09, Revenue from Contracts with Customers (“ASC 606”) as discussed in Note 2 below in “Accounting Pronouncements Recently Adopted.” ASC 606 establishes a principle for recognizing revenue upon the transfer of promised goods or services to customers, in an amount that reflects the expected consideration received in exchange for those goods or services. ASC 606 also includes Subtopic 340-40, Other Assets and Deferred Costs—Contracts with Customers , which requires the deferral of incremental costs of obtaining a contract with a customer. Collectively, references to ASC 606 used herein refer to both ASC 606 and Subtopic 340-40. The Company adopted ASC 606 with retrospective application to the beginning of the earliest period presented.
Initial public offering and concurrent private placement
On September 28, 2018, the Company completed its initial public offering (“IPO”), in which the Company issued and sold 17,250,000 shares of common stock (including the additional 2,250,000 shares that were sold pursuant to the Underwriters’ option to purchase additional shares) at $12.00 per share. The Company received aggregate proceeds of $192.5 million, net of underwriters' discounts and commissions of $14.5 million. Immediately subsequent to the closing of the Company’s IPO, Salesforce Ventures LLC purchased 3,333,333 shares of common stock from the Company at the IPO price of $12.00 per share, and the Company received aggregate proceeds of $40.0 million. The Company’s net proceeds from the IPO and the concurrent private placement totaled $225.3 million after deducting offering costs of $7.2 million.
Additionally, upon effectiveness of the registration statement for the Company's IPO, 2,574,499 net shares of Performance RSUs (as defined below) were released for awards where both a service condition and Performance Vesting Condition (as defined below) were met, and the Company recognized $89.9 million of stock-based compensation expense on an accelerated amortization method (see Notes 2 and 7 below for further discussion) and $21.4 million in payroll tax withholding obligations. The Company utilized a portion of its IPO proceeds to satisfy the payroll tax withholding obligations in the third quarter of 2018.
Use of Estimates
The preparation of consolidated financial statements in conformity with GAAP requires the Company’s management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities and disclosures of contingent assets and liabilities at the date of the consolidated financial statements and reported amounts of revenue and expenses during the reporting periods covered by the consolidated financial statements and accompanying notes. Actual results could differ materially from those estimates. The Company bases its
76
SVMK INC.
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
estimates on historical exper ience and on various other assumptions that it believes to be reasonable. The Company’s most significant estimates and judgments involve valuation of the Company’s stock-based awards, including the determination of fair value of common stock prior to the c ompletion of its IPO, valuation of deferred income tax assets, estimating the period of benefit for deferred commissions, valuation of acquired goodwill and intangibles from acquisitions, tax contingencies and legal contingencies.
Segment Information
The Company operates as a single operating segment. The Company’s chief operating decision maker (“CODM”) is its Chief Executive Officer, who reviews the Company’s operating results on a consolidated basis in order to make decisions about allocating resources and assessing performance for the entire company. The CODM uses one measure of profitability and does not segment the Company’s business for internal reporting. See Note 11 for additional information regarding the Company’s revenue and long-lived assets by geographic area.
Related Party Transactions
Certain members of the Company’s Board of Directors (“Board”) serve as board members, are executive officers of and/or (in some cases) are investors in companies that are customers and/or vendors of the Company. The Company recognized revenue from sales of its products to a substantial stockholder of $1.7 million, $2.1 million and $1.8 million during the years ended December 31, 2018, 2017 and 2016, respectively. Sales to a substantial stockholder represented less than 1.0% of the Company’s total revenue in each of the periods presented. The Company incurred related party expenses of $1.5 million, $0.8 million and $1.0 million during the years ended December 31, 2018, 2017 and 2016, respectively.
2. Summary of Significant Accounting Policies
Revenue Recognition and Deferred Revenue
The Company generates substantially all of its revenue from the sale of subscriptions to its survey software products including subscriptions to its purpose-built solutions. The revenue the Company generates from one purpose-built solution that is delivered and recognized at a point in time is not significant. The Company normally sells each of these products in separate contracts to its customers and each product, including purpose-built solutions, is distinct. The Company’s policy is to exclude sales and other indirect taxes when measuring the transaction price of its subscription agreements. The Company accounts for revenue contracts with customers through the following steps:
|
• |
Identification of the contract, or contracts, with a customer; |
|
• |
Identification of the performance obligations in the contract; |
|
• |
Determination of the transaction price; |
|
• |
Allocation of the transaction price to the performance obligations in the contract; and |
|
• |
Recognition of revenue when, or as, the Company satisfies a performance obligation. |
For subscription products, the Company provides customers the option of monthly, annual or multi-year contractual terms. In general, the Company’s customers elect contractual terms of one year or less. Subscription revenue is recognized on a daily basis ratably over the related subscription term beginning on the date the Company provides access to its survey product. Access to the Company’s subscription product is an obligation representing a series of distinct services (and which comprise a single performance obligation) that the Company provides to its end customer over the subscription term. The Company recognizes the majority of its revenue ratably because the customer benefits from access to the Company’s subscription products throughout the subscription term.
77
SVMK INC.
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
The Company generally invoices its customers at the beginni ng of the term on a monthly or annual basis. The Company's contracts are generally non-cancellable and do not contain refund-type provisions. The Company’s contracts do not contain a significant amount of variable consideration as the price of its subscrip tion offerings are generally fixed at contract inception. Based on the invoicing structure and related subscription term, the Company determined its contracts do not contain a financing component. The Company applied the practical expedient provided by ASC 606 and did not evaluate contracts of one year or less for the existence of a significant financing component. Amounts that have been invoiced are recorded in accounts receivable and in deferred revenue or revenue, depending on whether transfer of control to customers has occurred.
The Company records contract liabilities to deferred revenue when cash payments are received or due. Deferred revenue consists of the unearned portion of customer billings.
The Company recognized into revenue $83.3 million, $76.4 million and $72.0 million during the years ended December 31, 2018, 2017 and 2016, respectively, that was included in the deferred revenue balances at the beginning of each respective period.
As of December 31, 2018, future estimated revenue related to performance obligations that are unsatisfied or partially unsatisfied at the end the reporting period was $111.0 million. The substantial majority of the unsatisfied performance obligations will be satisfied over the next twelve months.
Deferred Commissions
Certain commissions earned by the Company’s salesforce are considered to be incremental and recoverable costs of obtaining a contract with a customer. Such costs are deferred and amortized on a straight-line basis over their estimated period of benefit which is generally estimated as four years. The period of benefit was estimated by considering factors such as historical customer attrition rates, the useful life of the Company’s technology, and the impact of competition in its industry. Amortization of deferred commissions, included in sales and marketing expense line within the statements of operations was $1.6 million, $1.0 million and $0.5 million during the years ended December 31, 2018, 2017 and 2016 respectively. There was no impairment loss in relation to the deferred commissions for any period presented.
Stock-Based Compensation
The Company recognizes stock-based compensation expense for all share-based payments to employees based on the grant-date fair value of the Company’s common stock estimated in accordance with the provisions of Accounting Standards Codification (“ASC”) 718, Compensation‑Stock Compensation . For time-based equity awards, stock-based compensation expense is recognized on a straight-line basis over the award’s requisite service period, which is generally four years for new hires and generally three years for subsequent grants to existing employees. For shares issuable under the Company’s employee stock purchase plan (“ESPP”), stock-based compensation expense is recognized on a straight-line basis over the award’s requisite service period, which is an offering period. The Company recognizes excess tax benefits from stock-based compensation expense in earnings, which are substantially offset by a valuation allowance. The Company made a policy election to account for forfeitures as they occur. The Company determines the fair value of equity awards as follows:
Stock Options and ESPP : The Company estimates the fair values of its stock options and shares issuable under the ESPP using the Black-Scholes-Merton option-pricing model for stock options granted at-the-money and ESPP shares issuable and Lattice-Binomial option valuation model for out-of-the-money stock option grants. The aforementioned valuation models require the input of key assumptions which are as follows:
|
• |
Expected Term : As the Company does not have sufficient historical information to develop reasonable expectations about future exercise patterns and post-vesting employment termination behavior, the Company determines the expected term based on the average period the stock options or ESPP are expected to remain outstanding. For awards granted at-the-money, the expected term is generally calculated as the midpoint of the stock options vesting term and contractual expiration. For awards granted out-of-the-money, the expected term was the midpoint of the stock options vesting term and contractual expiration adjusted to also consider the estimated period for those options to become in-the-money. For ESPP, the expected term is the applicable purchase periods within an offering period. |
78
SVMK INC.
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
|
• |
Expected Dividend Rate : The Company has not paid and does not anticipate paying cash dividends on its shares of common stock in the foreseeable future; therefore, the expected dividend yield is assumed to be zero. |
|
• |
Risk-Free Interest Rate : The Company determined the risk-free interest rate by using a weighted average assumption equivalent to the expected term based on the U.S. Treasury constant maturity rate as of the date of grant. |
Additionally, due to the absence of an active market for the Company’s common stock prior to its IPO, the Company obtained third-party valuations (prepared contemporaneously in connection with grants of share-based payments made prior to the Company’s IPO) to estimate the fair value of its common stock for purposes of measuring stock-based compensation expense to be recognized. The third-party valuations were prepared using methodologies, approaches, and assumptions consistent with the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (“AICPA”) Accounting & Valuation Guide, Valuation of Privately-Held-Company Equity Securities Issued as Compensation . Additional factors considered in preparing the third-party valuations were as follows:
|
• |
Market multiples of comparable public companies in the Company’s industry as indicated by their market capitalization and guideline merger and acquisition transactions; |
|
• |
The Company’s performance and market position relative to its competitors, who may change from time to time; |
|
• |
The Company’s historical financial results and estimated trends and prospects for its future performance; |
|
• |
The economic and competitive environment; |
|
• |
The likelihood and timeline of achieving a liquidity event, such as an IPO or sale of the Company, given prevailing market conditions; |
|
• |
Any adjustments necessary to recognize a lack of marketability for its common stock; and |
|
• |
Precedent sales of or offers to purchase its capital stock. |
For valuations subsequent to the Company’s IPO, its board of directors will determine the fair value of each share of underlying common stock based on the closing price of the Company’s common stock as reported on the date of the grant.
Restricted Stock Units and Restricted Stock Awards : The fair value of the restricted stock units (including those that are performance-based) and restricted stock awards was determined based on the fair value of the Company’s common stock on the grant date.
Beginning in the second quarter of 2015, the Company granted performance-based restricted stock units (“Performance RSUs”) that vest upon the satisfaction of both a service condition and a Performance Vesting Condition. The Performance Vesting Condition occurred upon the effectiveness of the registration statement for the Company's IPO, which was September 25, 2018. As a result, the Company recognized the cumulative amount of unrecognized stock-based compensation expense of $89.9 million for services already rendered using the accelerated attribution method. As of December 31, 2018, the remaining unamortized stock-based compensation related to these awards was $27.6 million, which the Company expects to recognize on an accelerated basis over the remaining weighted-average requisite service periods of 1.5 years (see Note 7 for additional discussion).
79
SVMK INC.
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
When the Company acquires a business, the purchase consideration is allocated to the tangible assets acquired, liabilities assumed, and intangible assets acquired based on their estimated respective fair values. The excess of the fair value of purchase consideration over the fair values of these identifiable assets and liabilities is recorded as goodwill. Such valuations require the Company to make significant estimates and assumptions, especially with respect to intangible assets. Significant estimates in valuing certain intangible assets include, but are not limited to, future expected cash flows from acquired users, acquired technology, and trade names from a market participant perspective, useful lives and discount rates. The Company’s estimates of fair value are based upon assumptions believed to be reasonable, but which are inherently uncertain and unpredictable and, as a result, actual results may differ from estimates. During the measurement period, which is one year from the acquisition date, the Company may record adjustments to the assets acquired and liabilities assumed, with the corresponding offset to goodwill. Upon the conclusion of the measurement period, any subsequent adjustments are recorded to non-operating income (expense) in the consolidated statement of operations.
Impairment of Long-Lived Assets
Long-lived assets with finite lives include property and equipment, capitalized internal-use software and acquisition intangible assets. Long-lived assets are depreciated or amortized over their estimated useful lives which are as follows:
Building |
|
40 years |
Computer equipment |
|
2 to 5 years |
Furniture, fixtures, and other assets |
|
5 years |
Leasehold improvements |
|
Shorter of remaining lease term or 5 years |
Purchased software |
|
3 years |
Capitalized internal-use software |
|
3 years |
Acquisition intangible assets: customer relationships |
|
5 to 7 years |
Acquisition intangible assets: trade name |
|
2 to 10 years |
Acquisition intangible assets: technology |
|
3 to 8 years |
The Company continually evaluates whether events and circumstances have occurred that indicate the remaining estimated useful life of depreciable or amortizable long-lived assets may warrant revision or that the remaining balance may not be recoverable. When factors indicate that long-lived assets should be evaluated for possible impairment, the Company uses an estimate of the related undiscounted future cash flows over the remaining life of the long-lived assets in measuring whether they are recoverable. If the estimated undiscounted future cash flows do not exceed the carrying value of the asset, a loss is recorded as the excess of the asset’s carrying value over its fair value. The Company did not recognize any impairment of long-lived assets during the year ended December 31, 2017. As further discussed in Note 13 below, during the year ended December 31, 2018, the Company impaired $2.8 million of leasehold improvements. As further discussed in Notes 6 and 13 below, during the year ended December 31, 2016, the Company derecognized $3.7 million of intangible assets. The Company believes that the carrying values of long-lived assets as of December 31, 2018 are recoverable.
Goodwill is not amortized but rather tested for impairment at least annually, or more frequently if events or changes in circumstances indicate that goodwill may be impaired. Goodwill impairment is recognized when the carrying value of goodwill exceeds the implied fair value of the Company. The Company did not recognize any impairment of goodwill during each of the years ended December 31, 2018 and 2017. As further discussed in Notes 6 and 13 below, during the year ended December 31, 2016, the Company derecognized $12.2 million of goodwill.
80
SVMK INC.
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
The functional currency of the Company’s foreign subsidiaries is generally the U.S. Dollar. Monetary assets and liabilities are remeasured using foreign currency exchange rates at the end of the period, and non-monetary assets are remeasured based on historical exchange rates. Gains and losses due to foreign currency are the result of either the remeasurement of subsidiary balances or transactions denominated in currencies other than the foreign subsidiaries’ functional currency and are included in other non-operating income (expense), net in the statement of operations.
For subsidiaries where the functional currency is the local currency, the assets and liabilities of those foreign subsidiaries are translated from their respective functional currencies into U.S. Dollars at the rates in effect at the balance sheet date and revenue and expense amounts are translated at a rate approximating the average exchange rate for the period. Foreign currency translation gains and losses are recorded to accumulated other comprehensive income (loss).
During the year ended December 31, 2016, the Company substantially liquidated certain foreign subsidiaries and, in accordance with ASC 830, Foreign Currency Matters, derecognized the cumulative translation adjustment of $1.4 million in accumulated other comprehensive income (loss). As a result, the Company recognized a realized loss of $1.4 million within other non-operating income (expense) in the consolidated statement of operations.
Concentration of Credit Risk
Financial instruments which potentially subject the Company to concentrations of credit risk consist principally of cash, cash equivalents and accounts receivable. The Company places its cash and cash equivalents in banks, primarily in checking accounts and such amounts may at times exceed the federally insured limits. Cash equivalents consist of short-term money market funds (for which the Company had none in any of the periods presented), which are managed by reputable financial institutions. For purposes of its customer concentration disclosure, the Company defines a customer as an organization. An organization may consist of an individual paying user, multiple paying users within an organization or the organization itself. No single customer accounted for more than 10% of revenue during each of the years ended December 31, 2018, 2017 and 2016. No customers accounted for more than 10% of accounts receivable, net as of December 31, 2018 and 2017, respectively.
Fair Value of Financial Instruments
The Company applies the provisions of ASC 820, Fair Value Measurement , to assets and liabilities that are required to be measured at fair value, which include investments in marketable debt and equity securities and derivative financial instruments.
Securities are classified as available for sale and are carried at fair value, with the change in unrealized gains and losses, net of tax, reported as a separate component on the consolidated statements of comprehensive income until realized.
See Note 4 for additional disclosures regarding fair value measurements.
Private Company Investments
As noted below under “ Accounting Pronouncements Recently Adopted ”, on January 1, 2018, the Company adopted ASU 2016-01 as of January 1, 2018 and accounts for private company investments, without readily determinable fair values, either under the equity or cost method. Investments through which the Company exercises significant influence but does not have control over the investee are accounted for under the equity method. Investments through which the Company is not able to exercise significant influence over the investee are measured and accounted for using an alternative measurement basis of a) the carrying value of a security at cost, b) less any impairment and c) plus or minus any qualifying observable price changes (with a same or similar security from the same issuer). These securities were previously accounted for using the cost method of accounting, measured at cost less other-than-temporary impairment. If an observable price change or impairment is recognized on the
81
SVMK INC.
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Company’s private company investments, such investments would then be classified as a Level 3 financial instrument within the fair value hierarchy based on the nature of the fair value inputs. The Company classifies p rivate company investments as other assets on the consolidated balance sheets as those investments do not have stated contractual maturity dates. Any adjustments to the carrying value are recognized in other non-operating income (expense), net in the conso lidated statement of operations. As of December 31 , 2018 and 2017 , respectively, the carrying value of the Company’s private company investment at cost was $3.6 million. There were no impairments or observable price changes for the Company’s private compan y investment during the year ended December 31 , 2018.
Impairment of Investments
The Company periodically reviews its investments for impairment. If the Company concludes that any of these investments are impaired, the Company determines whether such impairment is other-than-temporary. Factors considered to make such determination include the duration and severity of the impairment, the reason for the decline in value and the potential recovery period and the Company’s intent to sell. For debt securities, the Company also considers whether (1) it is more likely than not that the Company will be required to sell the security before recovery of its amortized cost basis, and (2) the amortized cost basis cannot be recovered as a result of credit losses. If the investment is considered to be other-than-temporarily impaired, the Company will record the investment at fair value by recognizing an impairment within other non-operating income (expense) in the consolidated statement of operations and establishing a new carrying value for the investment.
Derivative Financial Instruments
From time to time, the Company may use derivative financial instruments consisting of interest rate swaps to manage cash flow exposure under its credit facilities and accounts for such derivative financial instruments in accordance with ASC 815, Accounting for Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities . The Company recognizes its derivative financial instruments as an asset or liability in the consolidated balance sheets at fair value, if material. The Company did not have any material amount of derivative financial instruments during each of the years ended December 31, 2018, 2017 and 2016, respectively.
Cash and Cash Equivalents
Cash and cash equivalents primarily consist of cash on deposit with banks and investments in money market funds (for which the Company had none in any of the periods presented) with maturities of 90 days or less from the date of purchase. The Company also classifies amounts in transit from payment processors for customer credit card and debit card transactions as cash equivalents, because such amounts generally convert to cash within five days with little or no default risk.
Accounts Receivable
Accounts receivable are customer obligations that arise due to the time taken to settle transactions through direct customer payments. The Company bills in advance for monthly contracts and generally bills annually in advance for contracts with terms of one year or longer when it has an unconditional contractual right to consideration. The Company also recognizes an immaterial amount of contract assets, or unbilled receivables, primarily relating to rights to consideration for services completed but not billed at the reporting date. Unbilled receivables are classified as receivables when the Company has the right to invoice the customer.
The Company records an allowance for doubtful accounts based upon its assessment of various factors including the Company’s historical experience, the age of a customers’ accounts receivable balance, a customers’ credit quality, current economic conditions, historical bad debt expense trends and other factors that may affect a customers’ ability to pay to determine the level of allowance required. Amounts deemed uncollectible are recorded to the allowance for doubtful accounts with an offsetting charge in the statements of operations.
82
SVMK INC.
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Property and equipment, excluding buildings capitalized under build-to-suit lease arrangements which are discussed below, are recorded at cost and depreciated using the straight-line method over the estimated useful lives of the assets. Expenditures that improve an asset or extend its estimated useful life are capitalized. Costs of maintenance and repairs that do not improve or extend the lives of the respective assets are expensed as incurred.
Capitalized Internal-Use Software and Website Development Costs
The Company incurs development costs relating to its online survey platform as well as other software solely for internal-use. Costs relating to the planning and post‑implementation phases of development are expensed as incurred. Costs incurred in the development phase are capitalized and included in capitalized internal-use software, net and amortized over their estimated useful life, generally three years. Maintenance and training costs are expensed as incurred.
Lease Accounting
Except for the Company’s San Mateo building lease which is accounted for as a build-to-suit lease, the Company leases facilities, datacenters, and equipment which are accounted for as operating leases (as further described in Note 8). Rent escalations and concession provisions are considered in determining the total estimated rent expense to be incurred and which is recognized over the lease term on a straight-line basis. The Company records the difference between the rent paid and the straight-line rent as a deferred rent liability in the accompanying consolidated balance sheets. As of December 31, 2018, the deferred rent balance was $7.5 million ($0.3 million included in accrued expenses and other current liabilities and $7.2 million in other non-current liabilities). As of December 31, 2017, the deferred rent balance was $4.8 million ($0.2 million included in accrued expenses and other current liabilities and $4.6 million in other non-current liabilities).
For build-to-suit lease arrangements, the Company may be deemed to be the building owner during the construction period for accounting purposes. In that circumstance, the Company records an asset and liability for estimated construction costs incurred under a build-to-suit lease arrangement to the extent the Company is involved in the construction of structural improvements or takes construction risk prior to commencement of a lease.
The Company additionally has entered into subleases for unoccupied leased office space. To the extent there are losses associated with the sublease, they are recognized in the period the sublease is executed. Gains are recognized over the sublease life. Any sublease payments received in excess of the straight-line rent payments for the sublease are recorded in other non-operating income (expense).
Legal and Other Contingencies
The Company accrues a liability for either claims arising in the ordinary course of business, assessments resulting from non-income-based audits or litigation when it is probable that a loss has been incurred and the amount is reasonably estimable, the determination of which requires significant judgment. See Note 8 for additional information pertaining to legal and other contingencies.
Liability for Sabbatical Leave
The Company provides a sabbatical leave program to its employees whereby the Company’s full-time employees are eligible for four weeks of paid time-off after four years of continuous service. The Company accounts for sabbatical leaves in accordance with ASC 710, Compensated Absences . As of December 31, 2018, the accrued balance was $4.4 million ($2.3 million included in accrued compensation and $2.1 million in other non-current liabilities). As of December 31, 2017, the accrued balance was $3.6 million ($1.7 million included in accrued compensation and $1.9 million in other non-current liabilities).
83
SVMK INC.
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Advertising and Promotion Costs
Expenses related to advertising, marketing and promotion of the Company’s product offerings are expensed as incurred. These costs mainly consist of search engine marketing related costs. The Company incurred $24.0 million, $17.6 million and $13.6 million during the years ended December 31, 2018, 2017 and 2016, respectively, which are included in sales and marketing expenses in the consolidated statements of operations.
Cost of Revenue
Cost of revenue consists primarily of expenses associated with the delivery and distribution of the Company’s platform for users of the Company’s online survey platform. Cost of revenue generally consist of infrastructure costs, personnel costs and other related costs. Infrastructure costs generally include expenses related to the operation of the Company’s data centers, such as data center equipment depreciation and facility costs (such as co-location rentals), website hosting costs, credit card processing fees, amortization of capitalized software, charity donations and external sample costs. Personnel costs include salaries and bonuses, stock-based compensation expense, other employee benefits and travel-related expenses for employees whose primary responsibilities relate to supporting the Company’s infrastructure and delivering user support. Other related costs include amortization of acquired developed technology intangible assets and allocated overhead.
Research and Development
Research and development costs primarily include personnel costs (including salaries, bonuses, stock-based compensation expense, other employee benefits and travel-related expenses), costs for third-party consultants, depreciation of equipment used in research and development activities and allocated overhead. Except for costs associated with the development of internal-use software, research and development costs are expensed as incurred.
Sales and Marketing
Sales and marketing expenses relate to both self-serve and outbound sales activities. Sales and marketing expenses generally are comprised of personnel costs (including salaries, sales commissions and amortization of deferred sales commissions, stock-based compensation expense, other employee benefits and travel-related expenses), costs related to brand campaign fees, lead generation fees, amortization of acquired trade name and customer relationship intangible assets and allocated overhead.
General and Administrative
General and administrative expenses consist primarily of employee-related costs (including salaries, bonuses, stock-based compensation expense, other employee benefits and travel-related expenses) for legal, finance, human resources, and other administrative functions, as well as certain executives. In addition, general and administrative expenses include outside legal, accounting and other professional fees, non-income-based taxes and allocated overhead.
Restructuring
From time to time, the Company may implement a management-approved restructuring plan to improve efficiencies across the organization, reduce its cost structure, and/or better align its resources with the Company’s product strategy. Restructuring charges can include severance costs to eliminate a specified number of employees, infrastructure charges to vacate facilities and consolidate operations, contract cancellation costs and other related costs.
84
SVMK INC.
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
In connection with such plans, the Company may incur rest ructuring costs comprised of employee severance and associated termination costs related to the reduction of its workforce, losses on its non-cancelable lease contracts, and other contract termination costs. Costs associated with a restructuring plan are r ecognized and measured at fair value in the consolidated statement of operations in the period in which the liability is incurred. These restructuring initiatives may require the Company to make estimates in several areas including: (i) expenses for employ ee severance and other separation costs; (ii) realizable values of assets made redundant, obsolete, or excessive; and (iii) the ability to generate sublease income and to terminate lease obligations at the estimated amounts.
Other Non-Operating Income (Expense)
Other non-operating income (expense), net consists primarily of interest income, net foreign currency exchange gains (losses), gain on sale of private company investments, net realized gains and losses related to investments, and other. The components of other non-operating income (expense) recognized in the consolidated financial statements is as follows:
|
|
Year Ended December 31, |
|
|||||||||
(in thousands) |
|
2018 |
|
|
2017 |
|
|
2016 |
|
|||
Interest Income |
|
$ |
1,161 |
|
|
$ |
59 |
|
|
$ |
20 |
|
Foreign currency gains (losses), net |
|
|
(1,460 |
) |
|
|
85 |
|
|
|
(1,395 |
) |
Currency translation adjustment upon subsidiary liquidation |
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
(1,397 |
) |
Gain on sale of a private company investment |
|
|
999 |
|
|
|
6,750 |
|
|
|
— |
|
Loss on debt modification / extinguishment |
|
|
(941 |
) |
|
|
(194 |
) |
|
|
— |
|
Other income (expense), net |
|
|
(57 |
) |
|
|
910 |
|
|
|
(1,478 |
) |
Other non-operating income (expense), net |
|
$ |
(298 |
) |
|
$ |
7,610 |
|
|
$ |
(4,250 |
) |
As of December 31, 2016, the Company had a private company investment of approximately $5.0 million accounted for using the cost method of accounting, which it sold in January 2017 for cash consideration of $11.7 million and recognized a gain of $6.7 million during the year ended December 31, 2017. Additionally, the Company is entitled to contingent consideration to be received over three years following the close of the transaction, subject to the private company meeting certain employee retention and financial targets. Subsequent earn-out amounts collected will be recorded as a gain when cash is received. In February 2018, the Company received its share of the first installment of the earn-out payment of $1.0 million, which was recognized as a gain during year ended December 31, 2018.
Income Taxes
The Company accounts for income taxes using the asset and liability method. ASC 740, Accounting for Income Taxes, requires the recognition of deferred tax assets and liabilities based upon the temporary differences between the financial reporting and tax bases of assets and liabilities and using enacted rates in effect for the years in which the differences are expected to reverse.
Valuation allowances are established when necessary to reduce the deferred tax assets when it is more likely than not that a portion or all of the deferred tax assets will not be realized.
ASC 740 prescribes a recognition threshold and measurement attribute for the financial statement recognition and measurement of a tax position taken or expected to be taken on a tax return and provides guidance on derecognition, classification, interest and penalties, accounting in interim periods, disclosure and transition. The Company records uncertain tax positions on the basis of a two-step process in which: (1) the Company determines whether it is more likely than not that the tax positions will be sustained on the basis of technical merits of the position, and (2) for those tax positions that meet the more likely than not recognition threshold, the Company recognizes the tax benefit as the largest amount that is cumulatively more than 50% likely to be realized upon ultimate settlement with the related tax authority.
85
SVMK INC.
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
From time to time, the Company engages in certain interc ompany transactions and legal entity restructurings. The Company considers many factors when evaluating these transactions, including the alignment of their corporate structure with their organizational objectives and the operational and tax efficiency of their corporate structure, as well as the long-term cash flows and cash needs of its business. These transactions may impact the Company’s overall tax rate and/or result in additional cash tax payments. The impact in any period may be significant. These tr ansactions may be complex and the impact of such transactions on future periods may be difficult to estimate.
Accounting Pronouncements Recently Adopted
In May 2014, the FASB issued ASU 2014-09, Revenue from Contracts with Customers . ASC 606, as modified through other ASUs issued subsequent to ASU 2014-09, supersedes all existing revenue recognition requirements and requires the recognition of revenue when promised goods or services are transferred to customers in an amount that reflects the consideration to which the entity expects to be entitled to in exchange for those goods or services. ASC 606 also includes Subtopic 340-40, Other Assets and Deferred Costs—Contracts with Customers , which requires the deferral of incremental costs of obtaining a contract with a customer. ASC 606 was effective for public companies with fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2017.
On January 1, 2018, the Company adopted the requirements of ASC 606 using the full retrospective transition method. The primary impact of adopting ASC 606 relates to the deferral of incremental sales commissions incurred to obtain subscription contracts. Prior to the adoption of ASC 606, such costs were expensed as incurred. The Company amortizes these costs on a straight-line basis over a period of benefit, estimated to be generally four years.
The impact of adopting ASC 606 is as follows:
|
• |
Consolidated statements of operations impact: A decrease in sales and marketing expense of $1.0 million and $0.9 million during the years ended December 31, 2017 and 2016, respectively; and |
|
• |
Consolidated balance sheets impact: An increase in total assets of $3.2 million as of December 31, 2017. |
Financial Instruments : In January 2016, the FASB issued ASU 2016-01, Financial Instruments-Overall (Subtopic 825-10) : Recognition and Measurement of Financial Assets and Financial Liabilities . ASU 2016-01 amends certain aspects of the recognition, measurement, presentation, and disclosure of financial instruments. The most significant impact of ASU 2016-01 was for the Company’s private company investments whereby such investments are recorded at cost and adjusted for impairments and observable price changes through the consolidated statements of operations. ASU 2016-01 is effective for public companies with fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2017. The Company adopted ASU 2016-01 as of January 1, 2018 with no impact upon adoption.
Stock Compensation : In May 2017, the FASB issued ASU 2017-09, Compensation—Stock Compensation (Topic 718) Scope of Modification Accounting , which amends and improves the current modification accounting guidance in ASC 718. As amended, the new accounting guidance would be applicable only when there is a change in value resulting from an equity award modification. ASU 2017-09 is effective for public companies with fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2017. The Company adopted ASU 2017-09 as of January 1, 2018 with no impact upon adoption.
In June 2018, the FASB issued ASU 2018-07, Compensation—Stock Compensation (Topic 718) Improvements to Nonemployee Share-Based Payment Accounting , to simplify and improve the accounting guidance applicable to equity transactions with nonemployees. The most significant impact of ASU 2018-07 is that, similar to equity awards issued to employees, equity awards issued to nonemployees are accounted for at their grant date fair values pursuant to ASC 718 (rather than at their expected settlement date fair value under legacy GAAP). ASU 2018-07 is effective for public companies with fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2018. The Company early adopted ASU 2018-07 as of July 1, 2018 and recognized an adjustment of $43,000 to retained earnings as of January 1, 2018 for awards not settled as of the adoption date.
86
SVMK INC.
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Income Taxes : In October 2016 , the FASB issued ASU 2016-16, Income Taxes: Intra-Entity Transfers Other than Inventory (Topic 740) , which requires entities to recognize the income tax consequences of an intra-entity transfer of an asset other than inventory when the transfer occurs. AS U 2016-16 is effective for public companies with fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2017 and early adoption is permitted. The Company early adopted ASU 2016-16 as of January 1, 2018 with no impact upon adoption.
Accounting Pronouncements Not Yet Adopted
Leases : In February 2016, the FASB issued ASU 2016-02, Leases (Topic 842). ASU 2016-02, as modified through other ASUs issued subsequent to ASU 2016-02, generally requires companies to recognize operating and financing lease liabilities and corresponding right-of-use assets on the balance sheet. ASU 2016-02 is effective for public companies with fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2018 on a modified retrospective basis and early adoption is permitted. The Company plans to adopt the requirements of ASU 2016-02 as of January 1, 2019 including use of the transition method which allows for recognition of the cumulative-effect adjustments at the beginning of the adoption period. The Company currently expects that the lease for its San Mateo building (see Note 8 for additional information) will be classified as an operating lease upon adoption of ASU 2016-02, and, accordingly, the lease payments associated with the San Mateo building will be treated as operating expense in the consolidated statement of operations. Prior to adoption of ASU 2016-02, the lease payments were primarily included in interest expense in the consolidated statement of operations. Additionally, the Company currently expects that its operating leases will result in recognition of significant right-of-use assets and corresponding liabilities. The Company will continue to evaluate the effect of adopting this guidance on its consolidated financial statements and related disclosures up through the date of adoption.
Internal-Use Software : In August 2018, the FASB issued ASU 2018-15, Intangibles - Goodwill and Other - Internal-Use Software (Subtopic 350-40), Customer's Accounting for Implementation Costs Incurred in a Cloud Computing Arrangement That Is a Service Contract ("ASU 2018-15"). ASU 2018-15 amends current guidance to align the accounting for costs incurred in a hosting arrangement that is a service contract with the requirements for capitalizing costs associated with developing or obtaining internal-use software. Capitalized implementation costs must be expensed over the term of the hosting arrangement and presented in the same line item in the statement of income as the fees associated with the hosting element (service) of the arrangement. ASU 2018-15 is effective for public companies with fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2019, with early adoption permitted. The Company is currently evaluating the effect of adopting this guidance on its consolidated financial statements and related disclosures.
3. Cash and Cash Equivalents
As of December 31, 2018 and 2017, cash and cash equivalents were $153.8 million and $35.3 million, respectively.
Included in cash and cash equivalents are cash in transit from payment processors for credit and debit card transactions of $2.0 million and $1.9 million as of December 31, 2018 and 2017, respectively.
As of December 31, 2018, restricted cash of $564,000 was included within other assets. Restricted cash as of December 31, 2017 was nominal.
4. Fair Value Measurements
Assets and liabilities recorded at fair value in the consolidated financial statements are categorized based on the level of judgment associated with the inputs used to measure their fair value. Hierarchical levels which directly related to the amount of subjectivity associated with the inputs to the valuation of these assets or liabilities are as follows:
Level 1 – Observable inputs, such as quoted prices in active markets for identical assets or liabilities.
Level 2 – Observable inputs, other than Level 1 prices, such as quoted prices for similar assets or liabilities, quoted prices in markets that are not active or other inputs that are observable or can be corroborated by observable market data for substantially the full term of the assets or liabilities.
87
SVMK INC.
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Level 3 – Unobservable inputs that are supported by little or no market activity and that are significant to the fair value of the assets or liabilities.
The carrying amounts of the Company’s financial instruments, which generally include cash equivalents, accounts receivable and accounts payable, approximate their fair values due to their short maturities. The carrying value of the Company’s debt approximates fair value based on borrowing rates currently available to the Company for debt with similar terms and consideration of default and credit risk.
As of December 31, 2018 and 2017, respectively, the Company did not have any financial instruments accounted for pursuant to ASC 820.
5. Property and Equipment
As of December 31, 2018 and 2017, property and equipment consisted of the following:
(in thousands) |
|
December 31, 2018 |
|
|
December 31, 2017 |
|
||
Building |
|
$ |
71,780 |
|
|
$ |
71,780 |
|
Computer equipment |
|
|
21,448 |
|
|
|
22,225 |
|
Leasehold improvements |
|
|
56,396 |
|
|
|
54,004 |
|
Furniture, fixtures, and other assets |
|
|
10,566 |
|
|
|
10,573 |
|
Gross property and equipment |
|
|
160,190 |
|
|
|
158,582 |
|
Less: Accumulated depreciation |
|
|
(42,472 |
) |
|
|
(27,251 |
) |
Property and equipment, net |
|
$ |
117,718 |
|
|
$ |
131,331 |
|
Depreciation expense was $19.5 million, $15.9 million and $8.0 million, during the years ended December 31, 2018, 2017 and 2016, respectively.
6. Acquisitions, Intangible Assets and Goodwill
Renzu Acquisition
In April 2015, the Company entered into an Agreement and Plan of Reorganization with Renzu, Inc. (“Renzu”) and various other parties. Renzu’s business consisted of developing mobile measurement and analytics offerings, which assisted the Company in gathering implicit data within the mobile market. The Company, via merger, purchased all of the outstanding shares of Renzu on the closing date of May 20, 2015. The acquisition qualified as a business combination and was accounted for accordingly.
The total purchase price of $17.0 million was comprised of the issuance of restricted common stock of $10.3 million and cash payment of $6.7 million. The Company recorded $0.7 million of net tangible liabilities, $5.5 million of identifiable intangible assets based on their estimated fair values and $12.2 million of residual goodwill. Goodwill resulted primarily from the Company’s expectations of synergies from the integration of Renzu’s employee base and product offerings with the Company’s product offerings. Goodwill was not deductible for tax purposes.
Upon acquisition in May 2015, the Company’s intention was to integrate Renzu’s mobile measurement and analytics product into the existing core business, should the resulting product be successful. After releasing the product and evaluating its performance, the Company determined that the mobile measurement and analytics product was not a strategic fit for its other products and determined that it would focus on key investments that were more tightly tied with its core business. In its evaluation, the Company concluded Renzu was a standalone entity that was not fully integrated into the Company’s existing business lines and where the Company did not benefit from the acquired goodwill. In November 2016, the Company implemented a plan to wind down the operations of Renzu, as the acquisition was not integrated into the Company’s business, and derecognized the
88
SVMK INC.
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
carrying value of goodwill and intangibles of $12.2 million and $3.7 million, respectively, which is included in restruct uring within the consolidated statements of operations (see Note s 2 and 13 for additional discussion).
TechValidate Acquisition
In July 2015, the Company entered into an Agreement and Plan of Reorganization with TechValidate Software, Inc. (“TechValidate”) and various other parties. TechValidate is an online software platform specializing in marketing content automation. The Company, via merger, purchased all of the outstanding shares of TechValidate, then merged TechValidate with and into SurveyMonkey Inc. on the close date of July 31, 2015. The acquisition qualified as a business combination and was accounted for accordingly.
The total purchase price of $60.4 million was comprised of the issuance of common stock of $23.8 million and cash payment of $36.6 million (of which $22.2 million was paid at close and $14.4 million was deferred and paid in August 2016). The Company recorded $5.8 million of net tangible liabilities, $15.8 million of identifiable intangible assets based on their estimated fair values and $50.4 million of residual goodwill. Goodwill resulted primarily from the Company’s expectations of synergies from the integration of TechValidate’s employee base and product offerings with the Company’s product offerings. Goodwill was not deductible for tax purposes.
Capitalized internal-use software
As of December 31, 2018 and 2017, capitalized internal-use software consisted of the following:
(in thousands) |
|
December 31, 2018 |
|
|
December 31, 2017 |
|
||
Gross capitalized internal-use software |
|
$ |
109,133 |
|
|
$ |
95,607 |
|
Less: Accumulated amortization |
|
|
(75,853 |
) |
|
|
(54,114 |
) |
Capitalized internal use software, net |
|
$ |
33,280 |
|
|
$ |
41,493 |
|
Amortization expense related to capitalized internal-use software was $21.7 million, $21.1 million and $19.4 million during the years ended December 31, 2018, 2017 and 2016, respectively, and is included in cost of revenue in the consolidated statements of operations.
Acquisition intangible assets, net
As of December 31, 2018 and 2017, intangible assets, net consisted of the following:
|
|
December 31, 2018 |
|
|
December 31, 2017 |
|
||||||||||||||||||
(in thousands) |
|
Gross Carrying Amount |
|
|
Accumulated Amortization |
|
|
Net Carrying Amount |
|
|
Gross Carrying Amount |
|
|
Accumulated Amortization |
|
|
Net Carrying Amount |
|
||||||
Customer relationships |
|
$ |
47,696 |
|
|
$ |
(42,410 |
) |
|
$ |
5,286 |
|
|
$ |
47,696 |
|
|
$ |
(40,696 |
) |
|
$ |
7,000 |
|
Trade name |
|
|
6,072 |
|
|
|
(5,796 |
) |
|
|
276 |
|
|
|
6,072 |
|
|
|
(5,192 |
) |
|
|
880 |
|
Technology |
|
|
22,007 |
|
|
|
(18,245 |
) |
|
|
3,762 |
|
|
|
22,007 |
|
|
|
(16,293 |
) |
|
|
5,714 |
|
Acquisition intangible assets, net |
|
$ |
75,775 |
|
|
$ |
(66,451 |
) |
|
$ |
9,324 |
|
|
$ |
75,775 |
|
|
$ |
(62,181 |
) |
|
$ |
13,594 |
|
Amortization expense was $4.3 million, $4.5 million and $8.8 million during the years ended December 31, 2018, 2017 and 2016, respectively.
89
SVMK INC.
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
As of December 31, 2018, future amortization expense by year is expected to be as follows:
(in thousands) |
|
Capitalized internal-use software, net |
|
|
Acquisition intangible assets, net |
|
||
2019 |
|
$ |
12,662 |
|
|
$ |
3,839 |
|
2020 |
|
|
5,925 |
|
|
|
2,952 |
|
2021 |
|
|
1,092 |
|
|
|
1,705 |
|
2022 |
|
|
— |
|
|
|
828 |
|
Total amortization expense |
|
$ |
19,679 |
|
|
$ |
9,324 |
|
Future capitalized internal-use software amortization excludes $13.6 million of costs which are currently in the development phase.
Goodwill, net
The changes in the carrying amount of goodwill, net were as follows (in thousands):
Balance as of December 31, 2015 |
|
$ |
349,043 |
|
Goodwill derecognition |
|
|
(12,182 |
) |
Balance as of December 31, 2016 |
|
$ |
336,861 |
|
Balance as of December 31, 2017 |
|
$ |
336,861 |
|
Balance as of December 31, 2018 |
|
$ |
336,861 |
|
7. Stockholders’ Equity and Employee Benefit Plans
Common stock and preferred stock
In connection with the Company’s IPO, the Company’s stockholders approved the Fourth Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation to authorize the issuance of up to 900,000,000 shares, consisting of 800,000,000 shares of common stock at par value of $0.00001 per share and 100,000,000 shares of preferred stock at par value $0.00001 per share. In connection with the Fourth Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation, common stock and additional paid-in capital amounts in consolidated balance sheets have been adjusted to reflect the change in par value.
During the year ended December 31, 2018, the Company repurchased approximately $16,000 of common stock (1,159 shares) at a price of $13.65 per share, which was approximately the fair value of common stock at such time. During the year ended December 31, 2017, the Company repurchased approximately $144,000 of common stock (11,791 shares) at $12.21 per share, which was approximately the fair value of common stock at such time.
Equity Incentive Plans
The Company has two equity incentive plans: the 2011 Equity Incentive Plan (the “2011 Plan”) and the 2018 Equity Incentive Plan (the “2018 Plan”). The Company’s stockholders approved the 2018 Plan on September 5, 2018, and established it with an adjustable reserve of 9,394,744 shares of common stock. Additionally, upon the completion of the Company’s IPO in September 2018, the 2011 Plan was terminated and all shares that remained available for future issuance under the 2011 Plan at that time were transferred to the 2018 Plan. To the extent that grants outstanding under the 2011 Plan terminate, cancel or are forfeited, the shares reserved for issuance under such grants are transferred to the 2018 Plan and become available for subsequent grant thereunder.
90
SVMK INC.
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Under the 2018 Plan, the Board or a committee of the Board, may grant incentive and nonqualified stock options, stock appreciation rights, restricted or unrestricted stock awards, restricted stock units (“RSUs”), phantom st ock, performance awards or other stock-based awards to employees, directors and other individuals providing services to the Company. The purpose of the 2018 Plan is to promote the long-term growth and profitability of the Company by (i) providing employees with incentives to improve stockholder value and to contribute to the growth and financial success of the Company through their future services, and (ii) enabling the Company to attract, retain and reward the best ‑available persons. The options granted un der the 2018 Plan, may be granted at a price not less than the fair market value on the grant date.
The Board, or a committee of the Board, has granted options with an exercise price at or which approximates the fair value on the grant date to new hires, except for the out-of-the-money options granted to certain employees as discussed below. Grants of time-based awards generally vest over a four-year period for new hires and over a three-year period for subsequent grants to existing employees. The service condition for the majority of these awards is satisfied generally over the applicable vesting period. Options expire as determined by the Board, or committee of the Board, but not more than ten years after the date of the grant. In the second quarter of 2015, the Company began granting restricted stock units that contain both a service condition and Performance Vesting Condition. Both the service condition and Performance Vesting Condition must be met in order for these awards to vest and issue. The Performance Vesting Condition occurred upon the effectiveness of the registration statement for the Company's IPO, which was September 25, 2018.
The 2018 Plan provides for annual increases in the number of shares available for issuance on the first day of each year equal to the lesser of 12,500,000 shares, 5% of the outstanding shares on the last date of the preceding year, or a lower amount determined by the plan administrator. As of December 31, 2018, 13,626,822 shares of common stock remain available for grant under the 2018 Plan.
The following is a summary of stock option activity for the respective periods:
|
|
Stock Options |
|
|||||||||||||
|
|
Number of Shares |
|
|
Weighted Average Exercise Price |
|
|
Aggregate Intrinsic Value (in thousands) |
|
|
Weighted Average Remaining Contractual Term (in years) |
|
||||
Outstanding at December 31, 2015 |
|
|
13,039,688 |
|
|
$ |
14.39 |
|
|
$ |
11,142 |
|
|
|
8.8 |
|
Granted |
|
|
5,014,600 |
|
|
$ |
16.03 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Exercised |
|
|
(45,444 |
) |
|
$ |
4.42 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Forfeited |
|
|
(5,500,606 |
) |
|
$ |
15.99 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Expired |
|
|
(479,616 |
) |
|
$ |
10.72 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Outstanding, vested and expected to vest at December 31, 2016 |
|
|
12,028,622 |
|
|
$ |
14.53 |
|
|
$ |
9,903 |
|
|
|
8.3 |
|
Granted |
|
|
4,139,372 |
|
|
$ |
16.03 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Exercised |
|
|
(35,352 |
) |
|
$ |
4.35 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Forfeited |
|
|
(1,623,057 |
) |
|
$ |
16.02 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Expired |
|
|
(700,516 |
) |
|
$ |
14.77 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Outstanding, vested and expected to vest at December 31, 2017 |
|
|
13,809,069 |
|
|
$ |
14.82 |
|
|
$ |
9,292 |
|
|
|
7.8 |
|
Granted |
|
|
5,735,643 |
|
|
$ |
13.31 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Exercised |
|
|
(81,849 |
) |
|
$ |
6.01 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Forfeited |
|
|
(832,591 |
) |
|
$ |
15.01 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Expired |
|
|
(177,897 |
) |
|
$ |
14.08 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Outstanding, vested and expected to vest at December 31, 2018 |
|
|
18,452,375 |
|
|
$ |
14.39 |
|
|
$ |
8,482 |
|
|
|
7.5 |
|
Exercisable at December 31, 2018 |
|
|
10,435,039 |
|
|
$ |
14.31 |
|
|
$ |
8,436 |
|
|
|
6.6 |
|
91
SVMK INC.
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
The following is a summary of restricted stock awards for the respective period s :
|
|
Restricted Stock Awards |
|
|||||||||
|
|
Number of Shares |
|
|
Weighted Average Grant-Date Fair Value |
|
|
Weighted Average Remaining Contractual Term (in years) |
|
|||
Unvested at December 31, 2015 |
|
|
1,406,975 |
|
|
$ |
13.30 |
|
|
|
2.3 |
|
Vested |
|
|
(476,889 |
) |
|
$ |
11.18 |
|
|
|
|
|
Unvested at December 31, 2016 |
|
|
930,086 |
|
|
$ |
14.38 |
|
|
|
1.6 |
|
Vested |
|
|
(449,220 |
) |
|
$ |
14.38 |
|
|
|
|
|
Unvested at December 31, 2017 |
|
|
480,866 |
|
|
$ |
14.38 |
|
|
|
0.6 |
|
Vested |
|
|
(480,866 |
) |
|
$ |
14.38 |
|
|
|
|
|
Unvested at December 31, 2018 |
|
|
— |
|
|
$ |
0.00 |
|
|
|
0.0 |
|
The following is a summary of restricted stock units for the respective periods:
|
|
Restricted Stock Units |
|
|||||||||
|
|
Number of Shares |
|
|
Weighted Average Grant-Date Fair Value |
|
|
Weighted Average Remaining Contractual Term (in years) |
|
|||
Unvested at December 31, 2015 |
|
|
10,540,093 |
|
|
$ |
13.70 |
|
|
|
3.5 |
|
Granted |
|
|
5,492,600 |
|
|
$ |
12.22 |
|
|
|
|
|
Vested, gross of shares withheld for employee payroll taxes |
|
|
(2,546,058 |
) |
|
$ |
11.58 |
|
|
|
|
|
Forfeited/canceled, including shares withheld for employee payroll taxes |
|
|
(4,952,860 |
) |
|
$ |
13.57 |
|
|
|
|
|
Unvested at December 31, 2016 |
|
|
8,533,775 |
|
|
$ |
12.89 |
|
|
|
3.3 |
|
Granted |
|
|
2,936,437 |
|
|
$ |
11.91 |
|
|
|
|
|
Vested, gross of shares withheld for employee payroll taxes |
|
|
(1,443,302 |
) |
|
$ |
13.52 |
|
|
|
|
|
Forfeited/canceled, including shares withheld for employee payroll taxes |
|
|
(1,188,629 |
) |
|
$ |
12.71 |
|
|
|
|
|
Unvested at December 31, 2017 |
|
|
8,838,281 |
|
|
$ |
12.52 |
|
|
|
2.2 |
|
Granted |
|
|
3,911,841 |
|
|
$ |
13.26 |
|
|
|
|
|
Vested, gross of shares withheld for employee payroll taxes |
|
|
(5,883,890 |
) |
|
$ |
12.75 |
|
|
|
|
|
Forfeited/canceled, including shares withheld for employee payroll taxes |
|
|
(1,114,186 |
) |
|
$ |
12.65 |
|
|
|
|
|
Unvested at December 31, 2018 |
|
|
5,752,046 |
|
|
$ |
12.77 |
|
|
|
1.2 |
|
92
SVMK INC.
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Lattice-Binomial Option Valuation Model
Stock options granted during the years ended December 31, 2017 and 2016, respectively, were out-of-the-money and valued using the Lattice-Binomial Option Valuation Model which estimates fair value based on the assumed changes in prices for the option grants’ underlying asset over their contractual life. The fair value of the out-of-the-money stock options is being amortized on a straight-line basis over the requisite service period of the awards granted. The fair value of each out-of-the-money stock option was estimated on their grant dates using the following assumptions:
|
|
Year Ended December 31, |
|||||
|
|
2018 |
|
2017 |
|
|
2016 |
Expected life (in years) |
|
n/a |
|
5.7 to 6.1 |
|
|
7.0 to 9.2 |
Risk-free interest rate |
|
n/a |
|
2.3% - 2.4% |
|
|
1.7% - 2.0% |
Volatility |
|
n/a |
|
50% |
|
|
51% - 54% |
Dividend yield |
|
n/a |
|
—% |
|
|
—% |
Fair value of common stock |
|
n/a |
|
$11.84 to $12.33 |
|
|
$12.21 to $12.28 |
Black-Scholes-Merton Option Valuation Model
Stock options granted during the year ended December 31, 2018 were at-the-money and valued using the Black-Scholes-Merton Valuation Model. The fair value of the at-the-money stock options is being amortized on a straight-line basis over the requisite service period of the awards granted. The fair value of each at-the-money stock option was estimated on their grant dates using the following assumptions:
|
|
Year Ended December 31, |
||||
|
|
2018 |
|
2017 |
|
2016 |
Expected life (in years) |
|
5.8 to 6.1 |
|
n/a |
|
n/a |
Risk-free interest rate |
|
2.7% - 3.0% |
|
n/a |
|
n/a |
Volatility |
|
43% - 60% |
|
n/a |
|
n/a |
Dividend yield |
|
—% |
|
n/a |
|
n/a |
Fair value of common stock |
|
$12.00 to $13.65 |
|
n/a |
|
n/a |
2018 Employee Stock Purchase Plan
On September 5, 2018, the Company’s stockholders approved the 2018 Employee Stock Purchase Plan (the “ 2018 ESPP ” ), which became effective prior to the completion of the IPO, and established with an initial reserve of 2,673,444 shares of common stock. The 2018 ESPP provides for annual increases in the number of shares available for issuance on the first day of each year equal to the lesser of 5,346,888 shares, 1% of the outstanding shares on the last date of the preceding year, or a lower amount determined by the plan administrator. As of December 31, 2018, 2,673,444 shares of common stock remain available for grant under the 2018 ESPP.
Except for the initial offering period, the ESPP provides for 24-month offering periods beginning May 22 and November 22 of each year, and each offering period will consist of four six-month purchase periods. The initial offering period began on September 25, 2018 and will end on November 22, 2020. On each purchase date, eligible employees will purchase the shares at a price per share equal to 85% of the lesser of (1) the fair market value of the Company’s common stock on the offering date, or (2) the fair market value of its common stock on the purchase date.
93
SVMK INC.
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
The Company estimated the fair value of ESPP purchase rights using a Black-Scholes -Merton option pricing model with the following assumptions:
|
|
Year Ended December 31, |
||||||
|
|
2018 |
|
|
2017 |
|
2016 |
|
Expected life (in years) |
|
0.6 to 2.1 |
|
|
n/a |
|
n/a |
|
Risk-free interest rate |
|
2.4% - 2.9% |
|
|
n/a |
|
n/a |
|
Volatility |
|
38% - 40% |
|
|
n/a |
|
n/a |
|
Dividend yield |
|
—% |
|
|
n/a |
|
n/a |
|
Fair value of common stock |
|
$ |
12.89 |
|
|
n/a |
|
n/a |
Stock-Based Compensation Expense
Stock-based compensation expense recognized in the consolidated financial statements is as follows:
|
|
Year Ended December 31, |
|
|||||||||
(in thousands) |
|
2018 |
|
|
2017 |
|
|
2016 |
|
|||
Cost of revenue |
|
$ |
8,931 |
|
|
$ |
2,503 |
|
|
$ |
4,114 |
|
Research and development |
|
|
48,739 |
|
|
|
9,918 |
|
|
|
5,756 |
|
Sales and marketing |
|
|
19,046 |
|
|
|
8,069 |
|
|
|
8,712 |
|
General and administrative |
|
|
55,054 |
|
|
|
14,496 |
|
|
|
12,301 |
|
Restructuring |
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
2,074 |
|
Stock-based compensation expense, net of amounts capitalized |
|
|
131,770 |
|
|
|
34,986 |
|
|
|
32,957 |
|
Capitalized stock-based compensation expense |
|
|
2,609 |
|
|
|
3,119 |
|
|
|
6,090 |
|
Stock-based compensation expense |
|
$ |
134,379 |
|
|
$ |
38,105 |
|
|
$ |
39,047 |
|
Between November 2013 through May 2015, the Company granted approximately 16.7 million of stock options at $42.33 per share. In the third quarter of 2015, the Company repriced and exchanged (representing a probable to probable modification pursuant to ASC 718) approximately 11.9 million stock options at a ratio of two original options to purchase shares issued per one new option to purchase shares. As a result, the Company issued approximately 6.0 million options with an exercise price of $16.03 (the fair value per common share was $14.38 at the exchange date) in exchange for the previously granted stock options. The reprice and exchange resulted in an additional $19.8 million of stock-based compensation expense to be recognized over the requisite service period of the new award which was four years from exchange date. As of December 31, 2018, approximately $1.1 million of unrecognized compensation expense remains relating to the repriced and exchanged awards which will be recognized over the remaining service periods through 2019.
In 2016, the Company modified (primarily a probable to probable modification pursuant to ASC 718) the terms of approximately 0.9 million stock options and 0.1 million restricted stock units in connection with the March 2016 restructuring plan (see Note 13 for additional discussion). The modifications resulted in additional stock-based compensation expense of $2.5 million ($1.4 million for stock options and $1.1 million RSUs) which was fully recognized at the modification date and recognized as general and administrative, and restructuring costs in the consolidated statement of operations during 2016.
In the second quarter of 2017, the Company modified (an improbable to probable modification pursuant to ASC 718) the terms of approximately 0.5 million restricted stock awards which resulted in a reduction in stock-based compensation expense (as the award fair value at the modification date was less than at the grant date) of $1.1 million and was fully recognized at the modification date and recognized as sales and marketing costs in the consolidated statement of operations during the year ended December 31, 2017.
94
SVMK INC.
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
In the first quarter of 2018, the Company modified (an improbable to probable modification pursuant to ASC 718) the terms of approximately 0.5 million restricted stock awards which resulted in a reduction in stock-based compensation expense (as the award fair value at the mod ification date was less than at the grant date) of $0.5 million and was fully recognized at the modification date (in the first quarter of 2018) and recognized as research and development, and sales and marketing costs in the consolidated statement of oper ations during the year ended December 31 , 2018.
As of December 31, 2018, unamortized stock-based compensation was as follows:
|
|
Unrecognized stock-based compensation (in thousands) |
|
|
Weighted average vesting period (in years) |
|
||
Stock options |
|
$ |
45,217 |
|
|
|
2.3 |
|
Restricted stock units (service-based) |
|
|
7,548 |
|
|
|
2.7 |
|
Restricted stock units (performance-based) (1) |
|
|
27,637 |
|
|
|
1.5 |
|
ESPP |
|
|
4,587 |
|
|
|
1.9 |
|
Total unrecognized stock-based compensation |
|
$ |
84,989 |
|
|
|
|
|
(1) |
The Performance Vesting Condition occurred upon the effectiveness of the registration statement for the Company's IPO, which was September 25, 2018. The remaining unrecognized stock-based compensation expense is recognized on an accelerated basis over the weighted-average remaining requisite service period. |
401(k) Plan
In the United States, the Company offers its employees a defined contribution plan that qualifies as a deferred salary arrangement under Section 401 of the U.S. Internal Revenue Code (“401(k) Plan”). Under the 401(k) Plan, participating employees may defer a portion of their pretax earnings not to exceed the maximum amount allowed by the Internal Revenue Service. The Company currently provides a matching contribution of 25% of deferrals for eligible employees. Compensation expense for the Company's matching contributions was $2.3 million, $1.8 million and $1.7 million during the years ended December 31, 2018, 2017 and 2016, respectively.
8. Commitments and Contingencies
Leases
The Company leases certain equipment and facilities under operating leases which expire at various dates through December 2028. Gross rent expense was $4.0 million, $3.9 million and $4.1 million during the years ended December 31, 2018, 2017 and 2016, respectively.
San Mateo Building
In July 2015, the Company entered into a lease agreement for office space in San Mateo, California with a lease term until December 2028 (“San Mateo facility”). The Company uses the San Mateo facility for corporate headquarter functions, as well as product and engineering, sales and marketing, and administrative operations. The space rented is for the total office space available in the building, which was in the process of being constructed at the time the lease agreement was executed. Because of the Company’s involvement during the construction period, the Company is considered for accounting purposes to be the owner of the construction project. Accordingly, the building under construction was accounted for as owned real estate and was capitalized in the Company’s consolidated balance sheets as property and equipment-building with a corresponding non-current financing obligation on leased facility. Construction was completed in 2016 and the Company capitalized $71.8 million of construction costs for the building (see Note 5 for additional information). Additionally, the
95
SVMK INC.
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Company incurred additional leasehold improvement costs of which $14.3 million was reimbursed by the landlord (of which $6.8 million and $7.5 million was incurred during 2017 and 2016, respec tively ).
As of December 31, 2018 and 2017, the corresponding liability related to the construction costs incurred by the landlord totaled $92.0 million and $93.4 million, respectively, and is reflected in the consolidated balance sheets as financing obligations on leased facility. The obligation will be settled through monthly lease payments to the landlord and will include imputed interest on the unpaid financing obligation and ground lease.
As discussed in Note 1 above under “Accounting Pronouncements Not Yet Adopted” , the Company plans to adopt the requirements of ASU 2016-02 as of January 1, 2019 and currently expects that the San Mateo Lease will be classified as an operating lease.
Palo Alto Lease Termination
The Company previously leased office space in Palo Alto, California with a lease term until March 2026 (“Palo Alto facility”). The Company used the Palo Alto facility for corporate headquarter functions, as well as product and engineering, sales and marketing and administrative operations. As a result of the Company’s involvement during the construction period, the Company was considered the owner of the building and accounted for the building as owned real estate. In October 2016, the Company and the landlord entered into a Lease Termination Agreement to terminate the Palo Alto facility lease effective as of December 30, 2016. The landlord concurrently entered into a new lease with a new lessee for the Palo Alto facility and the Company did not incur any lease termination penalties as a result of the early lease termination. As the Company’s continuing involvement ended upon termination of the lease, the Company derecognized the building’s net book value of $60.1 million, which approximated the financing obligation’s carrying value at the time of exiting the premises. In addition, the Company also entered into an Asset Purchase Agreement with the new lessee for sale of certain property and equipment for $3.0 million and recognized a gain of $0.9 million which is included in other non-operating income (expense) in the consolidated statements of operations for the year ended December 31, 2016.
As of December 31, 2018, future minimum lease payments under operating leases and financing obligations, net of sublease income, by year were as follows:
In addition to commitments above, we have open non-cancellable purchase orders for the procurement of goods and services in the ordinary course of business totaling $15.7 million to be received through 2021.
Letters of Credit
As of December 31, 2018, the Company had standby letters of credit for $7.8 million which were issued in connection with certain leases.
96
SVMK INC.
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
From time to time, the Company is subject to legal proceedings and litigation arising in the ordinary course of business, which may include, but is not limited to, patent and privacy matters, labor and employment claims, class action lawsuits, as well as inquiries, investigations, audits and other regulatory proceedings. Periodically, the Company evaluates developments in its legal matters and records a liability when it believes that it is both probable that a loss has been incurred and the amount can be reasonably estimated. Significant judgment is required to determine both the likelihood of there being, and the estimated amount of, a loss related to such matters, and the Company's judgment may be incorrect.
There are currently no legal matters or claims that have arisen from the normal course of business that the Company believes would have a material impact on the Company’s financial position, results of operations or cash flows.
Warranties and Indemnification
The Company’s subscription services are generally warranted to perform materially in accordance with the Company’s online help documentation under normal use and circumstances. Additionally, the Company’s arrangements generally include provisions for indemnifying customers against liabilities if its subscription services infringe a third party’s intellectual property rights. Furthermore, the Company may also incur liabilities if it breaches the security or confidentiality obligations in its arrangements. To date, the Company has not incurred significant costs and has not accrued a liability in the accompanying consolidated financial statements as a result of these obligations.
9. Debt
As of December 31, 2018 and 2017, the carrying values of debt were as follows:
|
|
|
|
|
|
December 31, 2018 |
|
December 31, 2017 |
||||||||
|
|
Issuance date |
|
Maturity date |
|
Amount (in thousands) |
|
|
Effective Interest Rate |
|
Amount (in thousands) |
|
|
Effective Interest Rate |
||
Revolving credit facilities, as modified |
|
February 2013 |
|
April 2022 |
|
$ |
— |
|
|
n/a |
|
$ |
25,000 |
|
|
5.36% - 5.46% |
2018 Refinancing Facility Agreement |
|
October 2018 |
|
October 2025 |
|
|
219,450 |
|
|
6.00% - 6.10% |
|
|
— |
|
|
n/a |
2017 Refinancing Facility Agreement |
|
April 2017 |
|
April 2024 |
|
|
— |
|
|
n/a |
|
|
298,500 |
|
|
5.66% - 5.84% |
Total debt |
|
|
|
|
|
$ |
219,450 |
|
|
|
|
$ |
323,500 |
|
|
|
Less: Unamortized issuance discount and issuance costs, net |
|
|
|
|
|
|
2,035 |
|
|
|
|
|
5,179 |
|
|
|
Less: Current portion of debt, net |
|
|
|
|
|
|
1,900 |
|
|
|
|
|
2,032 |
|
|
|
Long term debt, net |
|
|
|
|
|
$ |
215,515 |
|
|
|
|
$ |
316,289 |
|
|
|
In February 2013, the Company entered into a Credit Agreement (“2013 Credit Facility”) which was subsequently amended at various dates primarily to revise certain financial covenants and ratios, permit certain transactions, increase the facility, or extend the maturity date. As modified, the 2013 Credit Facility comprised a $315.0 million term loan and $75.0 million revolving credit facility.
In April 2017, the Company entered into a Refinancing Facility Agreement (“2017 Credit Facility”), comprising a $300.0 million term loan and $75.0 million revolving credit facility. Upon execution of the 2017 Credit Agreement, the term loan under the 2013 Credit Facility was modified and partially extinguished and the Company recognized a $0.2 million loss on debt extinguishment during the year ended December 31, 2017.
97
SVMK INC.
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
In October 2018, the Company entered into a Refinancing Facility Agreement (“2018 Credit Facility”), comprising a $220.0 million term loan (th e Term Loan”) and $75.0 million revolving credit facility. Upon execution of the 2018 Credit Facility, the Company utilized a portion of its IPO proceeds to repay $101.3 million of debt outstanding under the 2017 Credit Facility and the Company recognized a $0. 9 million loss on debt modification. Loans under the 2018 Credit Facility accrue interest based upon, at the Company’s option, either at an alternate base interest rate (“ABR”) or a Eurocurrency rate, in each case plus an applicable margin. The applic able margin for the Term Loan is 2.75% in the case of a ABR loan and 3.75% in the case of a Eurocurrency loan, and the applicable margin for the revolving loan ranges from 0.75% to 1.50% in the case of a ABR loan and 1.75 to 2.50% in the case of a Eurocurr ency loan, and is based on the Company’s leverage ratio. The Company will make quarterly principal payments of $550,000 on the Term Loans with any remaining principal amounts due on October 10, 2025. The principal amount on the revolving credit facility is due and all revolver commitments terminate on October 10, 2023.
The Company records debt discounts and issuance costs as a reduction to the associated current and long-term portions of the debt in the consolidated balance sheets. The Company records debt discounts and issuance costs as a deferred asset when there is no associated debt liability. As of December 31, 2018, unamortized issuance discount and issuance costs of $0.4 million were included in prepaid expenses and other current assets and $1.4 million were included in other assets. The Company amortizes these costs using the straight-line method which approximates the effective interest rate method over the life of the loan. The amounts amortized are included in interest expense in the accompanying consolidated statements of operations.
As of December 31, 2018, the Company has $67.2 million of borrowing available under the line of credit portion of the 2018 Credit Facility.
The Company’s obligations under the 2018 Credit Facility are guaranteed by certain of its subsidiaries and secured by liens on substantially all of the assets of the Company and such subsidiaries. The 2018 Credit Facility contains financial, affirmative and negative covenants that, if violated, may require the Company to pay down the loans earlier than the stated maturity dates with higher interest rates. As of December 31, 2018, the Company was compliant with all of its debt covenant requirements in the 2018 Credit Facility. The Company believes that it will continue to comply with the terms of the loan agreements through the stated maturity dates. However, if the Company’s projections do not materialize, the Company may require additional equity or debt financing. There can be no assurance that additional financing, if required, will be available on terms satisfactory to the Company.
Principal and interest payments are due quarterly. As of December 31, 2018, future minimum payment obligations of principal amounts due by year under the 2018 Credit Facility were as follows (in thousands):
2019 |
|
$ |
2,200 |
|
2020 |
|
|
2,200 |
|
2021 |
|
|
2,200 |
|
2022 |
|
|
2,200 |
|
2023 |
|
|
2,200 |
|
Thereafter |
|
|
208,450 |
|
Total principal outstanding |
|
$ |
219,450 |
|
10. Income Taxes
Loss from operations before income taxes is categorized geographically as follows:
|
|
Year Ended December 31, |
|
|||||||||
(in thousands) |
|
2018 |
|
|
2017 |
|
|
2016 |
|
|||
United States |
|
$ |
(152,045 |
) |
|
$ |
(40,775 |
) |
|
$ |
(64,220 |
) |
Foreign |
|
|
(2,547 |
) |
|
|
718 |
|
|
|
(7,426 |
) |
Total loss from operations before income taxes |
|
$ |
(154,592 |
) |
|
$ |
(40,057 |
) |
|
$ |
(71,646 |
) |
98
SVMK INC.
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
The provision for (benefit from) income taxes consisted of the following:
|
|
Year Ended December 31, |
|
|||||||||
(in thousands) |
|
2018 |
|
|
2017 |
|
|
2016 |
|
|||
Current income tax expense: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Federal |
|
$ |
(70 |
) |
|
$ |
(12 |
) |
|
$ |
(6 |
) |
State |
|
|
48 |
|
|
|
23 |
|
|
|
45 |
|
Foreign |
|
|
677 |
|
|
|
790 |
|
|
|
327 |
|
Total current income tax expense |
|
|
655 |
|
|
|
801 |
|
|
|
366 |
|
Deferred income tax expense: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Federal |
|
|
(483 |
) |
|
|
(16,141 |
) |
|
|
4,109 |
|
State |
|
|
562 |
|
|
|
(248 |
) |
|
|
311 |
|
Foreign |
|
|
(586 |
) |
|
|
(459 |
) |
|
|
(82 |
) |
Total deferred income tax expense |
|
|
(507 |
) |
|
|
(16,848 |
) |
|
|
4,338 |
|
Total provision for (benefit from) income taxes |
|
$ |
148 |
|
|
$ |
(16,047 |
) |
|
$ |
4,704 |
|
A reconciliation of the Company’s effective tax rate to the federal statutory rate is as follows:
|
|
Year Ended December 31, |
|
|||||||||
(in thousands) |
|
2018 |
|
|
2017 |
|
|
2016 |
|
|||
Tax at federal statutory rate |
|
$ |
(32,464 |
) |
|
$ |
(14,020 |
) |
|
$ |
(25,076 |
) |
State income tax, net of federal tax benefit |
|
|
(6,764 |
) |
|
|
(3,898 |
) |
|
|
(2,255 |
) |
Foreign tax rate differential |
|
|
626 |
|
|
|
(493 |
) |
|
|
2,805 |
|
Stock-based compensation |
|
|
2,378 |
|
|
|
2,645 |
|
|
|
1,981 |
|
Transition tax |
|
|
— |
|
|
|
2,261 |
|
|
|
— |
|
Revaluation of deferred tax assets and liabilities |
|
|
— |
|
|
|
(10,259 |
) |
|
|
— |
|
Research and development credits |
|
|
(5,247 |
) |
|
|
(4,028 |
) |
|
|
(992 |
) |
Intangible asset write-off |
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
2,434 |
|
Other |
|
|
(106 |
) |
|
|
659 |
|
|
|
2,092 |
|
Change in valuation allowance |
|
|
41,725 |
|
|
|
11,086 |
|
|
|
23,715 |
|
Total provision for (benefit from) income taxes |
|
$ |
148 |
|
|
$ |
(16,047 |
) |
|
$ |
4,704 |
|
As of December 31, 2018 and 2017, the tax effects of temporary differences that give rise to significant portions of the Company’s deferred tax assets and liabilities are as follows:
(in thousands) |
|
December 31, 2018 |
|
|
December 31, 2017 |
|
||
Deferred tax assets: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net operating losses |
|
$ |
41,419 |
|
|
$ |
27,046 |
|
Tax credits |
|
|
23,359 |
|
|
|
12,110 |
|
Stock-based compensation |
|
|
25,208 |
|
|
|
11,372 |
|
Accrued compensation and related expenses |
|
|
4,061 |
|
|
|
1,843 |
|
Financing obligation- leased facility |
|
|
29,842 |
|
|
|
24,122 |
|
Other |
|
|
463 |
|
|
|
1,462 |
|
Total deferred tax assets: |
|
|
124,352 |
|
|
|
77,955 |
|
Valuation allowance |
|
|
(81,127 |
) |
|
|
(34,664 |
) |
Total deferred tax assets, net of valuation allowance: |
|
|
43,225 |
|
|
|
43,291 |
|
Deferred tax liabilities: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Depreciation and amortization |
|
|
(26,844 |
) |
|
|
(30,708 |
) |
Goodwill |
|
|
(19,307 |
) |
|
|
(16,017 |
) |
Total deferred tax liabilities: |
|
|
(46,151 |
) |
|
|
(46,725 |
) |
Total net deferred tax liabilities: |
|
$ |
(2,926 |
) |
|
$ |
(3,434 |
) |
99
SVMK INC.
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
As of December 31, 2018, the Company had federal and state net operating losses of $ 1 62 . 2 million and $ 6 3 . 8 million, respectively. If not utilized, the federal and state net operating loss carryforwards will begin to expire in 201 9 .
As of December 31, 2018, the Company had federal research and development credits of $14.7 million which will begin to expire in 2032; state research and development credits of $10.8 million which will carryforward indefinitely; and foreign research and development credits of $1.1 million which will begin to expire in 2037.
Assessing the realizability of the Company’s deferred tax assets is dependent upon several factors, including the likelihood and amount, if any, of future taxable income in relevant jurisdictions during the periods in which those temporary differences become deductible. The Company has evaluated the criteria for realization of deferred tax assets and, as a result, has determined that certain deferred tax assets are not realizable on a more likely than not basis. Accordingly, the Company recorded a valuation allowance of $81.1 million as of December 31, 2018. The valuation allowance increased by $46.5 million and decreased by $14.5 million during the years ended December 31, 2018 and 2017, respectively.
Internal Revenue Code Section 382 and similar state provisions limit the use of net operating losses and tax credit carryforwards in certain situations where changes occur in the stock ownership of a company. In the event the Company has a change of ownership, utilization of net operating losses and tax credit carryforwards may be limited. Certain acquired net operating losses and tax credits are subject to limitations. Net operating losses and tax credits have been reduced to reflect the amounts that can be utilized to reduce taxes payable in the future.
On December 22, 2017, the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 (the “Tax Act”) was signed into law making significant changes to the U.S. Internal Revenue Code. Changes include, but are not limited to, a federal corporate tax rate decrease from 35% to 21%, effective for tax years beginning after December 31, 2017, the transition of U.S. international taxation from a worldwide tax system to a territorial system, and the creation of a Global Intangible Low-taxed Income inclusion (“GILTI”).
ASC 740, Income Taxes , requires companies to recognize the effect of the tax law changes in the period of enactment. However, the SEC staff issued Staff Accounting Bulletin No. 118 (“SAB118”) which allowed companies to record provisional amounts during a measurement period not extending beyond one year from the Tax Act enactment date. The final amount related to the one-time transition tax on the mandatory deemed repatriation of foreign earnings was $0.4 million, which was fully offset with available net operating loss carryforwards. There were no changes to the amount recorded for the remeasurement of certain deferred tax assets and liabilities based on tax rates at which they are expected to reverse in the future and no changes to the amount of benefit recorded related to a valuation allowance release due to tax reform changes in the treatment of indefinite-lived attributes. As of December 31, 2018, the Company completed the accounting for all the impacts of the Tax Act.
The Tax Act subjects a US shareholder to tax on GILTI earned by certain foreign subsidiaries. The FASB Staff Q&A, Topic 740, No. 5, Accounting for Global Intangible Low-Taxed Income ("GILTI"), states that an entity can make an accounting policy election to either recognize deferred taxes for temporary basis differences expected to reverse as GILTI in future years or provide for the tax expense related to GILTI in the year the tax is incurred as a period expense. The results of the Company’s foreign operations did not give rise to a GILTI inclusion in the year ended December 31, 2018.
No additional income taxes have been provided for any remaining undistributed foreign earnings not subject to the one-time, mandatory transition tax, or additional outside basis difference of $4.8 million, as these amounts continue to be indefinitely reinvested in foreign operations.
The Company recorded cumulative unrecognized tax benefits pursuant to ASC 740-10 in the amount of $3.4 million, $1.5 million and $4.3 million during the years ended December 31, 2018, 2017 and 2016, respectively.
100
SVMK INC.
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
The Company’s policy is to recognize interest and penalties related to unrecognized tax benefits within the provision for income taxes. Amounts accrued for interest and penalti es were not significant as of December 31, 2018 and 2017, respectively or during years ended December 31, 201 8, 2017 and 201 6 , respectively. During the year ended December 31, 2017, the IRS concluded its audit of the Company’s 2014 tax returns. Upon closin g of the 2014 audit, the Company assessed the impact on unrecognized tax positions for all open years and recorded any necessary adjustments. The Company believes that it has provided adequate reserves for its income tax uncertainties in all open tax years . As the outcome of the audits cannot be predicted with certainty, if any issues addressed in the Company's tax audits are resolved in a manner inconsistent with management's expectations, the Company could be required to adjust its provision for income ta xes in the period such resolution occurs.
Changes in balances during 2018 and 2017 and ending balances as of December 31, 2018 and 2017 in gross unrecognized tax benefits were as follows:
(in thousands) |
|
December 31, 2018 |
|
|
December 31, 2017 |
|
||
Beginning balances |
|
$ |
1,486 |
|
|
$ |
4,273 |
|
Increases related to tax positions taken during a prior year |
|
|
584 |
|
|
|
2 |
|
Increases related to tax positions taken during the current year |
|
|
1,351 |
|
|
|
288 |
|
Decreases related to tax positions taken during a prior year |
|
|
(70 |
) |
|
|
(2,785 |
) |
Decreases related to tax settlements with taxing authorities |
|
|
— |
|
|
|
(292 |
) |
Ending balances |
|
$ |
3,351 |
|
|
$ |
1,486 |
|
The Company does not anticipate that the amount of existing unrecognized tax benefits will significantly increase or decrease within the next 12 months.
The Company files income tax returns in the U.S. federal, state, and certain foreign jurisdictions. The Company’s U.S federal income tax return years 2015 through 2018 remain open to examination. The Company’s respective state and foreign income tax return years 2012 to 2018 remain open to examination. There are no income tax audits currently in progress.
11. Geographical Information
Revenue by geography is generally based on the billing address of the customer. For purposes of its geographic revenue disclosure, the Company defines a customer as an organization. An organization may consist of an individual paying user, multiple paying users within an organization or the organization itself. The following table sets forth the percentage of revenue by geographic area:
|
|
Year Ended December 31, |
|
|||||||||
|
|
2018 |
|
|
2017 |
|
|
2016 |
|
|||
United States |
|
|
64 |
% |
|
|
65 |
% |
|
|
64 |
% |
Rest of world |
|
|
36 |
% |
|
|
35 |
% |
|
|
36 |
% |
No other country outside of the United States comprised 10% or greater of the Company’s revenue for each of the years ended December 31, 2018, 2017 and 2016.
101
SVMK INC.
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
As of December 31, 201 8 and 2017, the following table summarizes the percentage of the Company’s long-lived assets by geographic area :
|
|
Property and equipment, net |
|
|
Intangible assets, net |
|
||||||||||
|
|
December 31, 2018 |
|
|
December 31, 2017 |
|
|
December 31, 2018 |
|
|
December 31, 2017 |
|
||||
United States |
|
|
94 |
% |
|
|
99 |
% |
|
|
82 |
% |
|
|
82 |
% |
Canada |
|
|
5 |
% |
|
* |
|
|
* |
|
|
* |
|
|||
Ireland |
|
* |
|
|
* |
|
|
|
18 |
% |
|
|
18 |
% |
||
Rest of world |
|
|
1 |
% |
|
|
1 |
% |
|
|
— |
% |
|
|
— |
% |
* |
less than 1% |
12. Net Loss Per Share
Basic earnings per share is computed by dividing net loss by the weighted-average number of common shares outstanding during the period. Diluted earnings per share is computed by dividing net loss for the period by the weighted-average number of common shares outstanding during the period which includes potential dilutive common shares assuming the dilutive effect of outstanding stock options, restricted stock units (including those that are performance-based) and restricted stock awards calculated using the treasury stock method.
The following table sets forth the computation of basic and diluted earnings per share:
|
|
Year Ended December 31, |
|
|||||||||
(in thousands, except per share amounts) |
|
2018 |
|
|
2017 |
|
|
2016 |
|
|||
Numerator: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net loss |
|
$ |
(154,740 |
) |
|
$ |
(24,010 |
) |
|
$ |
(76,350 |
) |
Denominator: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Weighted-average shares outstanding - basic and diluted |
|
|
107,900 |
|
|
|
100,244 |
|
|
|
98,539 |
|
Net loss per common share - basic and diluted: |
|
$ |
(1.43 |
) |
|
$ |
(0.24 |
) |
|
$ |
(0.77 |
) |
The Company was in a loss position for the periods presented. Accordingly, basic net loss per share is the same as diluted net loss per share as the inclusion of all potential common shares outstanding would have been anti-dilutive. Prior to application of the treasury stock method, share equivalents (comprising stock options, restricted stock units (including those that are performance-based), ESPP, and restricted stock awards) excluded from the calculations of diluted net loss per share were 25.2 million, 23.1 million and 21.5 million during the years ended December 31, 2018, 2017 and 2016, respectively.
13. Restructuring Costs
November 2017 Restructuring Plan
In November 2017, the Company implemented a restructuring plan (“November 2017 Plan”) to reduce its sales and marketing headcount and centralize its sales function in its San Mateo, CA headquarters. The total restructuring costs associated with the November 2017 Plan was $5.2 million and was primarily lease termination costs and employee severance, of which $1.7 million was recognized during the fourth quarter of 2017 and $3.5 million was recognized in the fourth quarter of 2018. The restructuring costs incurred during the fourth quarter of 2018 are primarily due to the changes in estimated lease termination costs resulting from lower estimated sublease cash payments, and related leasehold impairment costs as the Company estimates that the leasehold improvements at the vacated facility would not be recoverable from the estimated sublease cash flows.
102
SVMK INC.
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
November 2016 Restructuring Plan
In November 2016, the Company implemented a restructuring plan (“November 2016 Plan”) to wind down the operations of the Renzu business which was acquired in May 2015 (see Note 6 for additional discussion). The total estimated restructuring costs associated with the November 2016 Plan was approximately $1.5 million and was primarily employee severance. Additionally, as a result of the wind down of the operations of Renzu, the Company concluded that the acquired goodwill and intangibles of Renzu had no future economic benefit and the related derecognition costs of $15.9 million were also classified as a restructuring related cost (see Notes 2 and 6 for additional information). Substantially all of the costs related to the November 2016 Restructuring Plan was recognized during the fourth quarter of 2016.
March 2016 Restructuring Plan
In March 2016, the Company implemented a restructuring plan (“March 2016 Plan”) to reduce its sales and marketing headcount and close several of its international locations, which was primarily related to the Company’s decision to generally cease offering the non-self-serve portion of its SurveyMonkey Audience solution. The total estimated restructuring costs associated with the March 2016 Plan was approximately $7.9 million and was primarily employee severance, substantially all of which was recognized during 2016.
The restructuring plans were subject to applicable laws and consultation processes, as a part of the Company’s strategic plan to focus on its core product and improve efficiencies. In connection with these actions, the Company incurred the following pre-tax costs:
|
|
Year Ended December 31, |
|
|||||||||
(in thousands) |
|
2018 |
|
|
2017 |
|
|
2016 |
|
|||
Employee severance |
|
$ |
73 |
|
|
$ |
498 |
|
|
$ |
5,834 |
|
Contract termination and other costs |
|
|
631 |
|
|
|
1,287 |
|
|
|
1,453 |
|
Stock based compensation |
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
2,074 |
|
Impairment of property and equipment |
|
|
2,821 |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
Derecognition of goodwill and intangibles assets |
|
|
— |
|
|
|
— |
|
|
|
15,895 |
|
Total restructuring costs |
|
$ |
3,525 |
|
|
$ |
1,785 |
|
|
$ |
25,256 |
|
The balances as of December 31, 2018 and 2017 included $0.6 million and $1.0 million, respectively, recorded in accrued expenses and other current liabilities and $0.3 million and $0.4 million, respectively, recorded in other non-current liabilities. As of December 31, 2018, the majority of amounts accrued pertain to non-cancellable lease costs, which will be paid through 2021.
14. Subsequent Events
Additional earn-out payment received from sale of a private company investment
In January 2019, the Company received proceeds of $1.0 million representing the second earn-out payment from the sale of a private company investment which will be recognized as a gain on sale of assets during the first quarter of 2019.
Increase of share reserves under equity incentive plans
On January 1, 2019, the number of authorized shares of common stock that may be issued under the 2018 Plan and 2018 ESPP increased by 6,290,894 shares and 1,258,178 shares, respectively, pursuant to the automatic share increase provisions of the plans.
103
SVMK INC.
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
2019 s tock- b ased a wards a ctivity
In February 2019, the Company granted 2,225,766 stock options and 3,820,944 restricted stock units to its employees, substantially all of which were issued as a part of the Company’s annual stock-based award process. The stock options and restricted stock units granted have vesting restrictions, valuations and contractual lives of a similar nature to those described in Note 7 above. The stock option and restricted stock unit grants result in gross stock-based compensation of $66.3 million.
104
Item 9. Changes in and Disagreements with Acco untants on Accounting and Financial Disclosure
None.
Item 9A. Controls and Procedures
Evaluation of Disclosure Controls and Procedures
Our management, with the participation of our principal executive officer and principal financial officer, has evaluated the effectiveness of our disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, or the Exchange Act), as of the end of the period covered by this Annual Report on Form 10-K. Based on such evaluation, our principal executive officer and principal financial officer have concluded that as of such date, our disclosure controls and procedures were effective at a reasonable assurance level to ensure that information required to be disclosed by us in reports that we file or submit under the Exchange Act is recorded, processed, summarized, and reported within the time periods specified in SEC rules and forms and is accumulated and communicated to our management, including our principal executive officer and principal financial officer, as appropriate to allow timely decisions regarding required disclosure.
Management's Report on Internal Control Over Financial Reporting
This Annual Report on Form 10-K does not include a report of management's assessment regarding internal control over financial reporting or an attestation report of our independent registered public accounting firm as permitted during the transition period for newly public companies under the rules of the SEC.
Changes in Internal Control Over Financial Reporting
There was no change in our internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Rules 13a-15(d) and 15d-15(d) under the Exchange Act) that occurred during the period covered by this Annual Report on Form 10-K that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, our internal control over financial reporting.
Inherent Limitations on Effectiveness of Disclosure Controls and Procedures
Our management, including our principal executive officer and principal financial officer, do not expect that our disclosure controls and procedures or our internal control over financial reporting will prevent all errors and all fraud. A control system, no matter how well designed and operated, can provide only reasonable, not absolute, assurance that the objectives of the control system are met. Further, the design of a control system must reflect the fact that there are resource constraints, and the benefits of controls must be considered relative to their costs. Because of the inherent limitations in all control systems, no evaluation of controls can provide absolute assurance that all control issues and instances of fraud, if any, have been detected. These inherent limitations include the realities that judgments in decision-making can be faulty, and that breakdowns can occur because of a simple error or mistake. Additionally, controls can be circumvented by the individual acts of some persons, by collusion of two or more people or by management override of the controls. The design of any system of controls is also based in part upon certain assumptions about the likelihood of future events, and there can be no assurance that any design will succeed in achieving its stated goals under all potential future conditions; over time, controls may become inadequate because of changes in conditions, or the degree of compliance with policies or procedures may deteriorate. Due to inherent limitations in a cost-effective control system, misstatements due to error or fraud may occur and not be detected.
Not applicable.
105
Item 10. Directors, Executive Officers and Corporate Governance
The information required by this item will be set forth in our Proxy Statement relating to our annual meeting of stockholders to be filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission within 120 days after December 31, 2018 and is incorporated herein by reference.
Item 11. Executi ve Compensation
The information required by this item will be set forth in our Proxy Statement relating to our annual meeting of stockholders to be filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission within 120 days after December 31, 2018 and is incorporated herein by reference.
Item 12. Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Ow ners and Management and Related Stockholder Matters
The information required by this item will be set forth in our Proxy Statement relating to our annual meeting of stockholders to be filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission within 120 days after December 31, 2018 and is incorporated herein by reference.
Item 13. Certain Relationships and Related Transactions, and Director Independence
The information required by this item will be set forth in our Proxy Statement relating to our annual meeting of stockholders to be filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission within 120 days after December 31, 2018 and is incorporated herein by reference.
Item 14. Principal Accou ntant Fees and Services
The information required by this item will be set forth in our Proxy Statement relating to our annual meeting of stockholders to be filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission within 120 days after December 31, 2018 and is incorporated herein by reference.
106
Item 15. Exhibits , Financial Statement Schedules
|
(a) |
The following documents are filed as a part of this Annual Report on Form 10-K: |
|
(1) |
Consolidated Financial Statements: See “Index to Consolidated Financial Statements” under Part II, Item 8 of this Annual Report on Form 10-K). |
|
(2) |
Financial Statement Schedules: Schedules not listed above have been omitted because the information required to be set forth therein is not applicable or is shown in the financial statements or notes herein. |
|
(3) |
Exhibits: The documents listed in the following Exhibit Index of this Annual Report on Form 10-K are incorporated by reference or are filed with this Annual Report on Form 10-K, in each case as indicated therein (numbered in accordance with Item 601 of Regulation S-K). |
None.
107
|
|
|
|
Incorporated by Reference |
|||||||
Exhibit No. |
|
Exhibit Description |
|
Form |
|
File No. |
|
Exhibit |
|
Filing Date |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
3.1 |
|
Fourth Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation of the Registrant. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
3.2 |
|
|
S-1 |
|
333-227099 |
|
3.4 |
|
August 29, 2018 |
||
4.1 |
|
|
S-1/A |
|
333-227099 |
|
4.1 |
|
September 13, 2018 |
||
10.1+ |
|
|
S-1 |
|
333-227099 |
|
10.1 |
|
August 29, 2018 |
||
10.2+ |
|
SVMK Inc. 2018 Equity Incentive Plan and related form agreements. |
|
S-1 |
|
333-227099 |
|
10.2 |
|
August 29, 2018 |
|
10.3+ |
|
SVMK Inc. 2018 Employee Stock Purchase Plan and related form agreements. |
|
S-1/A |
|
333-227099 |
|
10.3 |
|
September 13, 2018 |
|
10.4+ |
|
|
S-1/A |
|
333-227099 |
|
10.9 |
|
September 13, 2018 |
||
10.5+ |
|
|
S-1/A |
|
333-227099 |
|
10.10 |
|
September 13, 2018 |
||
10.6+ |
|
|
S-1/A |
|
333-227099 |
|
10.11 |
|
September 13, 2018 |
||
10.7+ |
|
|
S-1/A |
|
333-227099 |
|
10.12 |
|
September 13, 2018 |
||
10.8+ |
|
|
S-1/A |
|
333-227099 |
|
10.13 |
|
September 13, 2018 |
||
10.9+ |
|
|
S-1/A |
|
333-227099 |
|
10.14 |
|
September 13, 2018 |
||
10.10+ |
|
Form of Change in Control and Severance Agreements between the Registrant and each of its officers. |
|
S-1/A |
|
333-227099 |
|
10.19 |
|
September 13, 2018 |
|
10.11+ |
|
|
S-1 |
|
333-227099 |
|
10.20 |
|
August 29, 2018 |
||
10.12+ |
|
|
S-1 |
|
333-227099 |
|
10.21 |
|
August 29, 2018 |
||
10.13 |
|
|
S-1/A |
|
333-227099 |
|
10.25 |
|
September 13, 2018 |
||
10.14 |
|
|
8-K |
|
001-38664 |
|
10.1 |
|
October 12, 2018 |
108
|
|
8-K |
|
001-38664 |
|
10.2 |
|
October 12, 2018 |
|||
21.1 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
23.1 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
24.1 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
31.1 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
31.2 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
32.1 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
101.INS |
|
XBRL Instance Document. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
101.SCH |
|
XBRL Taxonomy Extension Schema Document. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
101.CAL |
|
XBRL Taxonomy Extension Calculation Linkbase Document. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
101.DEF |
|
XBRL Taxonomy Extension Definition Linkbase Document. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
101.LAB |
|
XBRL Taxonomy Extension Label Linkbase Document. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
101.PRE |
|
XBRL Taxonomy Extension Presentation Linkbase Document. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
+ |
Indicates management contract or compensatory plan. |
† |
The certification attached as Exhibit 32.1 to this Annual Report on Form 10-K is furnished pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350. It is not being filed for purposes of Section 18 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, and it is not to be incorporated by reference into any filing of SVMK Inc., whether made before or after the date of this Annual Report on Form 10-K, regardless of any general incorporation language in such filing. |
109
Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.
|
|
SVMK Inc. |
||
|
|
|
||
Date: February 26, 2019 |
|
By: |
|
/s/ Timothy J. Maly |
|
|
|
|
Timothy J. Maly |
|
|
|
|
Chief Financial Officer and Chief Operating Officer (Duly Authorized Officer and Principal Financial Officer) |
POWER OF ATTORNEY
KNOW ALL PERSONS BY THESE PRESENTS , that each person whose signature appears below constitutes and appoints Alexander J. Lurie, Timothy J. Maly and Lora D. Blum, jointly and each one of them, as his or her true and lawful attorneys-in-fact and agents with full power of substitution and resubstitution, for him or her and in their name, place and stead, in any and all capacities, to this Annual Report on Form 10-K (including any amendments), and to file the same, with all exhibits thereto and other documents in connection therewith, with the Securities and Exchange Commission, granting unto said attorneys-in-fact and agents, and each of them, full power and authority to do and perform each and every act and thing requisite and necessary to be done in connection therewith, as fully to all intents and purposes as he or she might or could do in person, hereby ratifying and confirming all that said attorneys-in-fact, and agents or any of them, or his or her substitute or substitutes, may lawfully do or cause to be done by virtue hereof.
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, this report has been signed by the following persons on behalf of the Registrant and in the capacities and on the date indicated.
Signature |
|
Title |
|
Date |
|
|
|
|
|
/s/ Alexander J. Lurie |
|
Chief Executive Officer and Director |
|
February 26, 2019 |
ALEXANDER J. LURIE |
|
(Principal Executive Officer) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/s/ Timothy J. Maly |
|
Chief Financial Officer and Chief Operating Officer |
|
February 26, 2019 |
TIMOTHY J. MALY |
|
(Principal Financial Officer) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/s/ Dharti Patel |
|
Chief Accounting Officer and Controller |
|
February 26, 2019 |
DHARTI PATEL |
|
(Principal Accounting Officer) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/s/ David A. Ebersman |
|
Chair of the Board of Directors |
|
February 26, 2019 |
DAVID A. EBERSMAN |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/s/ Susan L. Decker |
|
Director |
|
February 26, 2019 |
SUSAN L. DECKER |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/s/ Dana L. Evan |
|
Director |
|
February 26, 2019 |
DANA L. EVAN |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/s/ Ryan Finley |
|
Director |
|
February 26, 2019 |
RYAN FINLEY |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/s/ Erika H. James |
|
Director |
|
February 26, 2019 |
ERIKA H. JAMES |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/s/ Sheryl K. Sandberg |
|
Director |
|
February 26, 2019 |
SHERYL K. SANDBERG |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/s/ Brad D. Smith |
|
Director |
|
February 26, 2019 |
BRAD D. SMITH |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/s/ Benjamin C. Spero |
|
Director |
|
February 26, 2019 |
BENJAMIN C. SPERO |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/s/ Serena J. Williams |
|
Director |
|
February 24, 2019 |
SERENA J. WILLIAMS |
|
|
|
|
EXHIBIT 3.1
FOURTH AMENDED AND RESTATED CERTIFICATE OF INCORPORATION
of
SVMK inc.
a Delaware corporation
SVMK Inc., a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the State of Delaware (the “ Corporation ”), hereby certifies as follows:
A. The name of the Corporation is SVMK Inc., and the original Certificate of Incorporation of the Corporation was filed with the Secretary of State of the State of Delaware on October 28, 2011, under the name SurveyMonkey Inc.
B. This Fourth Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation was duly adopted in accordance with Sections 242 and 245 of the General Corporation Law of the State of Delaware (the “ DGCL ”), restates, integrates and further amends the provisions of the Corporation’s Third Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation, and has been duly approved by the written consent of the stockholders of the Corporation in accordance with Section 228 of the DGCL.
C. The text of the Fourth Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation of the Corporation is hereby amended and restated to read in its entirety as follows:
ARTICLE I
The name of this corporation is SVMK Inc.
ARTICLE II
The address of the Corporation’s registered office in the State of Delaware is Corporation Trust Center, 1209 Orange Street, Wilmington, New Castle County, Delaware, 19801. The name of the Corporation’s registered agent at such address is The Corporation Trust Company.
ARTICLE III
The nature of the business or purposes to be conducted or promoted by the Corporation is to engage in any lawful act or activity for which corporations may be organized under the DGCL.
ARTICLE IV
4.1 Authorized Capital Stock . The total number of shares of all classes of capital stock that the Corporation is authorized to issue is 900,000,000 shares, consisting of 800,000,000 shares of Common Stock, par value $0.00001 per share (the “ Common Stock ”), and 100,000,000 shares of Preferred Stock, par value $0.00001 per share (the “ Preferred Stock ”).
4.2 Increase or Decrease in Authorized Capital Stock . The number of authorized shares of Preferred Stock or Common Stock may be increased or decreased (but not below the number of shares thereof then outstanding) by the affirmative vote of the holders of a majority in voting power of the then-outstanding shares of capital stock of the Corporation entitled to vote thereon , irrespective of the provisions of Section 242(b)(2) of the DGCL (or any successor provision thereto), voting together as a single class, without a separate vote of the holders of the class or classes the number of authorized shares of which are being increased or decreased, unless a vote by any holders of one or more series of Preferred Stock is required by the express terms of any series of Preferred Stock as provided for or fixed pursuant to the provisions of Section 4.4 of this Article IV.
4.3 Common Stock .
(a) The holders of shares of Common Stock shall be entitled to one vote for each such share on each matter properly submitted to the stockholders on which the holders of shares of Common Stock are entitled to vote. Except as otherwise required by law or this certificate of incorporation (this “ Certificate of Incorporation ” which term, as used herein, shall mean the certificate of incorporation of the Corporation, as amended from time to time, including the terms of any certificate of designation of any series of Preferred Stock), and subject to the rights of the holders of Preferred Stock, at any annual or special meeting of the stockholders the holders of shares of Common Stock shall have the right to vote for the election of directors and on all other matters properly submitted to a vote of the stockholders; provided, however, that, except as otherwise required by law or expressly provided for in this Certificate of Incorporation, holders of Common Stock shall not be entitled to vote on any amendment to this Certificate of Incorporation that relates solely to the terms, number of shares, powers, designations, preferences, or relative participating, optional or other special rights (including, without limitation, voting rights), or to qualifications, limitations or restrictions thereon, of one or more outstanding series of Preferred Stock if the holders of such affected series are entitled, either separately or together with the holders of one more other such series, to vote thereon pursuant to this Certificate of Incorporation (including, without limitation, by any certificate of designation relating to any series of Preferred Stock) or pursuant to the DGCL.
(b) Subject to the rights of the holders of Preferred Stock, the holders of shares of Common Stock shall be entitled to receive such dividends and other distributions (payable in cash, property or capital stock of the Corporation) when, as and if declared thereon by the Board of Directors of the Corporation (the “ Board ”) from time to time out of any assets or funds of the Corporation legally available therefor and shall share equally on a per share basis in such dividends and distributions.
(c) In the event of any voluntary or involuntary liquidation, dissolution or winding-up of the Corporation, after payment or provision for payment of the debts and other liabilities of the Corporation, and subject to the rights of the holders of Preferred Stock in respect thereof, the holders of shares of Common Stock shall be entitled to receive all the remaining assets of the Corporation available for distribution to its stockholders, ratably in proportion to the number of shares of Common Stock held by them.
-2 -
(a) The Preferred Stock may be issued from time to time in one or more series pursuant to a resolution or resolutions providing for such issue duly adopted by the Board (authority to do so being hereby expressly vested in the Board). The Board is further authorized, subject to limitations prescribed by law, to fix by resolution or resolutions and to set forth in a certificate of designation filed pursuant to the DGCL the powers, designations, preferences and relative, participat ing , optional or other rights, if any, and the qualifications, limitations or restrictions thereof, if any, of any series of Preferred Stock, including without limitation dividend rights, dividend rate, conversion rights, voting rights, rights and terms of redemption (including , without limitation, sinking fund provisions), redemption price or prices, and liquidation preferences of any such series, and the number of shares constituting any such series and the designation thereof, or any of the foregoing.
(b) The Board is further authorized to increase (but not above the total number of authorized shares of the class) or decrease (but not below the number of shares of any such series then outstanding) the number of shares of any series subject to the powers, preferences and rights, and the qualifications, limitations and restrictions thereof stated in the Certificate of Incorporation or the resolution of the Board originally fixing the number of shares of such series. If the number of shares of any series is so decreased, then the shares constituting such decrease shall resume the status which they had prior to the adoption of the resolution originally fixing the number of shares of such series.
ARTICLE V
5.1 General Powers . The business and affairs of the Corporation shall be managed by or under the direction of the Board.
5.2 Number of Directors; Election; Term .
(a) Subject to the rights of holders of any series of Preferred Stock with respect to the election of directors, the number of directors that constitutes the entire Board shall be fixed solely by resolution of the Board acting pursuant to a resolution adopted by a majority of the Whole Board. For purposes of this Certificate of Incorporation, the term “Whole Board” shall mean the total number of authorized directors whether or not there exist any vacancies or unfilled seats in previously authorized directorships.
Subject to the rights of holders of any series of Preferred Stock with respect to the election of directors, effective upon the closing date of the initial sale of shares of Common Stock in the Corporation’s initial public offering pursuant to an effective registration statement filed under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the “ Effective Date ”), the directors of the Corporation shall be divided into three classes as nearly equal in size as is practicable, hereby designated Class I, Class II and Class III. The initial assignment of members of the Board to each such class shall be made by the Board. The term of office of the initial Class I directors shall expire at the first regularly-scheduled annual meeting of the stockholders following the Effective Date, the term of office of the initial Class II directors shall expire at the second annual meeting of the stockholders following the Effective Date and the term of office of the initial Class III directors shall expire at the third annual meeting of the stockholders following the Effective Date. At each annual meeting of stockholders, commencing with the first regularly-scheduled annual meeting of stockholders following the Effective Date, each of the successors elected to replace the directors of a class
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whose term shall have expired at such annual meeting shall be elected to hold office until the third annual meeting next succeeding their election and until their respective successor shall have been duly elected and qualified. Subject to the rights of holders of any series of Preferred Stock with respect to the election of directors, if the number of directors that constitutes the Board is changed, any newly created directorships or decrease in directorships shall be so apportioned by the Board among the classes as to make all classes as nearly equal in number as is practicable, provided that no decrease in the number of directors constituting the Board shall shorten the term of any incumbent director.
(b) Notwithstanding the foregoing provisions of this Section 5.2, and subject to the rights of holders of any series of Preferred Stock with respect to the election of directors, each director shall serve until their successor is duly elected and qualified or until their earlier death, resignation, or removal.
(c) Elections of directors need not be by written ballot unless the Bylaws of the Corporation (the “ Bylaws ”) shall so provide.
5.3 Removal . Effective upon the Effective Date, and subject to the rights of holders of any series of Preferred Stock with respect to the election of directors, for so long as directors of the Corporation shall be divided into classes, a director may be removed from office by the stockholders of the Corporation only for cause.
5.4 Vacancies and Newly Created Directorships . Subject to the rights of holders of any series of Preferred Stock with respect to the election of directors, and except as otherwise provided in the DGCL or as permitted in the specific case by resolution of the Board, vacancies occurring on the Board for any reason and newly created directorships resulting from an increase in the authorized number of directors may be filled only by vote of a majority of the remaining members of the Board, although less than a quorum, or by a sole remaining director, and not by stockholders. A person so chosen to fill a vacancy or newly created directorship shall hold office until the next election of the class for which such director shall have been chosen and until their successor shall be duly elected and qualified.
ARTICLE VI
In furtherance and not in limitation of the powers conferred by statute, the Board is expressly authorized to adopt, amend or repeal the Bylaws. With respect to the power of holders of capital stock of the Corporation to adopt, amend and repeal the Bylaws, notwithstanding any other provision of the Bylaws or any provision of law which might otherwise permit a lesser vote or no vote, but in addition to any affirmative vote of the holders of any particular class or series of the capital stock of the Corporation required by law, the Certificate of Incorporation, the Bylaws or any Preferred Stock, the affirmative vote of the holders of at least 66% of the voting power of all of the then-outstanding shares entitled to vote thereon, voting together as a single class, shall be required to adopt, amend or repeal any provision of the Bylaws.
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7.1 No Action by Written Consent of Stockholders . Except as otherwise expressly provided by the terms of any series of Preferred Stock permitting the holders of such series of Preferred Stock to act by written consent, effective upon the Effective Date any action required or permitted to be taken by stockholders of the Corporation must be effected at a duly called annual or special meeting of the stockholders and may not be effected by written consent in lieu of a meeting.
7.2 Meetings of Stockholders . Except as otherwise expressly provided by the terms of any series of Preferred Stock permitting the holders of such series of Preferred Stock to call a special meeting of the holders of such series, special meetings of stockholders of the Corporation may be called only by the Board, acting pursuant to a resolution adopted by a majority of the Whole Board, the chairperson of the Board, the chief executive officer of the Corporation or the president of the Corporation (in the absence of a chief executive officer of the Corporation), but a special meeting of stockholders may not be called by any other person or persons and the ability of the stockholders to call a special meeting is hereby specifically denied. The Board, acting pursuant to a resolution adopted by a majority of the Whole Board, or the chairperson of a meeting of stockholders may cancel, postpone or reschedule any previously scheduled meeting of stockholders at any time, before or after the notice for such meeting has been sent to the stockholders.
7.3 Advance Notice . Advance notice of stockholder nominations for the election of directors and of business to be brought by stockholders before any meeting of the stockholders of the Corporation shall be given in the manner provided in the Bylaws.
7.4 No Cumulative Voting . No stockholder will be permitted to cumulate votes at any election of directors.
ARTICLE VIII
8.1 Limitation of Personal Liability . To the fullest extent permitted by the DGCL, as it presently exists or may hereafter be amended from time to time, a director of the Corporation shall not be personally liable to the Corporation or its stockholders for monetary damages for breach of fiduciary duty as a director. If the DGCL is amended to authorize corporate action further eliminating or limiting the personal liability of directors, then the liability of a director of the Corporation shall be eliminated or limited to the fullest extent permitted by the DGCL, as so amended.
8.2 Indemnification .
The Corporation shall indemnify, to the fullest extent permitted by applicable law, any director or officer of the Corporation who was or is a party or is threatened to be made a party to any threatened, pending or completed action, suit or proceeding, whether civil, criminal, administrative or investigative (a “ Proceeding ”) by reason of the fact that he or she is or was a director, officer, employee or agent of the Corporation or is or was serving at the request of the Corporation as a director, officer, employee or agent of another corporation, partnership, joint venture, trust or other enterprise, including service with respect to employee benefit plans, against expenses (including attorneys’ fees), judgments, fines and amounts paid in settlement actually and
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reasonably incurred by such person in connection with any such Proceeding. The Corporation shall be required to indemnify a person in connection with a Proceeding (or part thereof) initiated by such person only if the Proceeding (or part thereof) was authorized by the Board.
The Corporation shall have the power to indemnify, to the extent permitted by the DGCL, as it presently exists or may hereafter be amended from time to time, any employee or agent of the Corporation who was or is a party or is threatened to be made a party to any Proceeding by reason of the fact that he or she is or was a director, officer, employee or agent of the Corporation or is or was serving at the request of the Corporation as a director, officer, employee or agent of another corporation, partnership, joint venture, trust or other enterprise, including service with respect to employee benefit plans, against expenses (including attorneys’ fees), judgments, fines and amounts paid in settlement actually and reasonably incurred by such person in connection with any such Proceeding.
Any repeal or amendment of this Article VIII by the stockholders of the Corporation or by changes in law, or the adoption of any other provision of this Certificate of Incorporation inconsistent with this Article VIII will, unless otherwise required by law, be prospective only (except to the extent such amendment or change in law permits the Corporation to further limit or eliminate the liability of directors) and shall not adversely affect any right or protection of any current or former director of the Corporation existing at the time of such repeal or amendment or adoption of such inconsistent provision with respect to acts or omissions occurring prior to such repeal or amendment or adoption of such inconsistent provision.
ARTICLE IX
The Corporation reserves the right to amend, alter, change or repeal any provision contained in this Certificate of Incorporation (including, without limitation, any rights, preferences or other designations of Preferred Stock), in the manner now or hereafter prescribed by this Certificate of Incorporation and the DGCL; and all rights, preferences and privileges herein conferred upon stockholders by and pursuant to this Certificate of Incorporation in its present form or as hereafter amended are granted subject to the right reserved in this Article IX. Notwithstanding any other provision of this Certificate of Incorporation, and in addition to any other vote that may be required by law or the terms of any series of Preferred Stock, the affirmative vote of the holders of at least 66% of the voting power of all then outstanding shares of capital stock of the Corporation entitled to vote thereon, voting together as a single class, shall be required to amend, alter or repeal, or adopt any provision as part of this Certificate of Incorporation inconsistent with the purpose and intent of, Article V, Article VI, Article VII or this Article IX (including, without limitation, any such article as renumbered as a result of any amendment, alteration, change, repeal or adoption of any other article).
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, SVMK Inc. has caused this Fourth Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation to be signed by its duly authorized officer on this 28th day of September 2018.
By: |
/s/ Alexander J. Lurie |
Name: |
Alexander J. Lurie |
Title: |
Chief Executive Officer |
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Exhibit 21.1
SUBSIDIARIES OF SVMK INC.
Name of Subsidiary |
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Place of Incorporation |
SurveyMonkey Inc. |
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Delaware |
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SurveyMonkey Global Holdings UC |
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Ireland |
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SurveyMonkey Europe UC |
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Ireland |
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SurveyMonkey Canada Inc. |
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Canada |
Exhibit 23.1
CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM
We consent to the incorporation by reference in the Registration Statement (Form S-8 No. 333-227635) pertaining to the 2011 Equity Incentive Plan, the 2018 Equity Incentive Plan and the 2018 Employee Stock Purchase Plan of SVMK Inc. of our report dated February 26, 2019, with respect to the consolidated financial statements of SVMK Inc. included in this Annual Report (Form 10-K) of SVMK Inc. for the year ended December 31, 2018.
/s/ Ernst & Young LLP
San Francisco, California
February 26, 2019
CERTIFICATION OF PRINCIPAL EXECUTIVE OFFICER
PURSUANT TO EXCHANGE ACT RULES 13a-14(a) AND 15d-14(a),
AS ADOPTED PURSUANT TO SECTION 302 OF THE SARBANES-OXLEY ACT OF 2002
I, Alexander J. Lurie, certify that:
1. |
I have reviewed this Annual Report on Form 10-K of SVMK Inc.; |
2. |
Based on my knowledge, this report does not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact necessary to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which such statements were made, not misleading with respect to the period covered by this report; |
3. |
Based on my knowledge, the financial statements, and other financial information included in this report, fairly present in all material respects the financial condition, results of operations and cash flows of the registrant as of, and for, the periods presented in this report; |
4. |
The registrant’s other certifying officer and I are responsible for establishing and maintaining disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e)) for the registrant and have: |
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a) |
designed such disclosure controls and procedures, or caused such disclosure controls and procedures to be designed under our supervision, to ensure that material information relating to the registrant, including its consolidated subsidiaries, is made known to us by others within those entities, particularly during the period in which this report is being prepared; |
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b) |
evaluated the effectiveness of the registrant’s disclosure controls and procedures and presented in this report our conclusions about the effectiveness of the disclosure controls and procedures, as of the end of the period covered by this report based on such evaluation; and |
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c) |
disclosed in this report any change in the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting that occurred during the registrant’s most recent fiscal quarter (the registrant’s fourth fiscal quarter in the case of an annual report) that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting; and |
5. |
The registrant’s other certifying officer and I have disclosed, based on our most recent evaluation of internal control over financial reporting, to the registrant’s auditors and the audit committee of the registrant’s board of directors (or persons performing the equivalent functions): |
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a) |
all significant deficiencies and material weaknesses in the design or operation of internal control over financial reporting which are reasonably likely to adversely affect the registrant’s ability to record, process, summarize and report financial information; and |
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b) |
any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other employees who have a significant role in the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting. |
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CERTIFICATION OF PRINCIPAL FINANCIAL OFFICER
PURSUANT TO EXCHANGE ACT RULES 13a-14(a) AND 15d-14(a),
AS ADOPTED PURSUANT TO SECTION 302 OF THE SARBANES-OXLEY ACT OF 2002
I, Timothy J. Maly, certify that:
1. |
I have reviewed this Annual Report on Form 10-K of SVMK Inc.; |
2. |
Based on my knowledge, this report does not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact necessary to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which such statements were made, not misleading with respect to the period covered by this report; |
3. |
Based on my knowledge, the financial statements, and other financial information included in this report, fairly present in all material respects the financial condition, results of operations and cash flows of the registrant as of, and for, the periods presented in this report; |
4. |
The registrant’s other certifying officer and I are responsible for establishing and maintaining disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e)) for the registrant and have: |
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a) |
designed such disclosure controls and procedures, or caused such disclosure controls and procedures to be designed under our supervision, to ensure that material information relating to the registrant, including its consolidated subsidiaries, is made known to us by others within those entities, particularly during the period in which this report is being prepared; |
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b) |
evaluated the effectiveness of the registrant’s disclosure controls and procedures and presented in this report our conclusions about the effectiveness of the disclosure controls and procedures, as of the end of the period covered by this report based on such evaluation; and |
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c) |
disclosed in this report any change in the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting that occurred during the registrant’s most recent fiscal quarter (the registrant’s fourth fiscal quarter in the case of an annual report) that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting; and |
5. |
The registrant’s other certifying officer and I have disclosed, based on our most recent evaluation of internal control over financial reporting, to the registrant’s auditors and the audit committee of the registrant’s board of directors (or persons performing the equivalent functions): |
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a) |
all significant deficiencies and material weaknesses in the design or operation of internal control over financial reporting which are reasonably likely to adversely affect the registrant’s ability to record, process, summarize and report financial information; and |
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b) |
any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other employees who have a significant role in the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting. |
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CERTIFICATION OF PRINCIPAL EXECUTIVE OFFICER AND PRINCIPAL FINANCIAL OFFICER
PURSUANT TO 18 U.S.C. SECTION 1350,
AS ADOPTED PURSUANT TO SECTION 906 OF THE SARBANES-OXLEY ACT OF 2002
I, Alexander J. Lurie, certify, pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350, as adopted pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, that the Annual Report on Form 10-K of SVMK Inc. for the year ended December 31, 2018 fully complies with the requirements of Section 13(a) or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, and that the information contained in such Annual Report on 10-K fairly presents, in all material respects, the financial condition and results of operations of SVMK Inc.
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Date: February 26, 2019 |
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By: |
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/s/ Alexander J. Lurie |
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Alexander J. Lurie Chief Executive Officer and Director (Principal Executive Officer) |
I, Timothy J. Maly, certify, pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350, as adopted pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, that the Annual Report on Form 10-K of SVMK Inc. for the year ended December 31, 2018 fully complies with the requirements of Section 13(a) or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, and that the information contained in such Annual Report on 10-K fairly presents, in all material respects, the financial condition and results of operations of SVMK Inc.
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Date: February 26, 2019 |
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By: |
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/s/ Timothy J. Maly |
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Timothy J. Maly |
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Chief Financial Officer and Chief Operating Officer (Principal Financial Officer) |
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