Q3 2025 Snowflake Inc Earnings Call
outperforming expectations and increasing our FY25 product revenue guide.
More and more, it is clear that our customers believe Snowflake is the easiest and most cost effective.
Speaker Change: and many more. Thank you for watching. I hope you enjoyed this video. If you did, please click the like button and subscribe to my channel. I'll see you in the next video.
Speaker Change: Ladies and gentlemen, please remain holding while I reconnect the speak-me line.
Everyone, please remain holding the call briefly momentarily.
David, Michael Cikos, Michael Cikos
[inaudible]
Speaker Change: and many more. Thank you for watching. I hope you enjoyed this video. If you did, please click the Like button and subscribe to my channel. I'll see you in the next video.
Speaker Change: Welcome back. I'd now like to pass the call back over to Sridhar.
Sridhar: Thanks, Jimmy, and hi, everyone. Thanks for joining us today. As you've seen by now, we had a strong third quarter, outperforming expectations and increasing our Fiscal 25 Product Revenue Guide.
Sridhar: One and more, it is clear that our customers believe Snowflake is the easiest and most cost-effective enterprise data platform out there.
Sridhar: Our customers are getting tremendous value from us, with many of them going all-in on Snowflake.
Sridhar: Our product development engine continues to accelerate as we launched the same number of Tier 1 features to general availability in Q3 as we did in all of Fiscal 24. Our AI feature family, Snowflake Cortex, is showing significant adoption.
Sridhar: And we improved our go-to-market motion across the board, and it's having a huge impact on new product adoption. We are firing on all cylinders.
Sridhar: The credit goes to the entire Snowflake team, and I'm very encouraged by our progress showing up so well in the numbers.
Sridhar: Product revenue for the quarter was $900 million, up a strong 29% year-on-year.
Sridhar: Given the strong quarter, we are again increasing our product revenue outlook for the year.
In the quarter, Nanga operating margin improved to 6%.
Sridhar: Having driven strong gains in product speed and revenue growth in Q3, we initiated an even more rigorous approach to cost management.
Sridhar: We've been creating centralized and more efficient teams for some areas and removing redundant management layers, which enables us to make decisions faster.
Sridhar: And we are deploying AI to drive higher velocity while reducing overall costs. We also eliminated a number of efforts that were underperforming and not aligned with our top goals as a company.
Sridhar: I'm particularly proud of the team for driving efficiency throughout our business.
Sridhar: This operational rigor is now a way of life for us, enabling us to improve profitability while aggressively investing in our innovation and go-to-market engines.
Sridhar: Our obsessive drive to produce product cohesion and ease of use has built Snowflake into the easiest-to-use and most cost-effective enterprise data platform.
Sridhar: And that is what is leading us to win new logo after new logo, expand within our customer base, and displace our competition over and over again.
Sridhar: Like in the quarter, when a global telecom giant spent all-in-one snowflake as their data foundation.
Sridhar: We are helping them process network performance data from systems that carry a large volume of the world's mobile traffic so they can consistently deliver superior network speeds and reliability to millions of mobile users worldwide.
Sridhar: I personally spent a lot of time connecting with our customers around the world. Much of it took place during our Snowflake World Tours, where we welcomed a record 29,000 attendees across 24 in-person events.
Sridhar: In the cities we returned to, we saw a remarkable 40% increase in attendance year-over-year, demonstrating the incredible momentum we are seeing at a global scale.
Sridhar: In City after City, we heard the same three things from our customers. How much they allow our technology, how easy it is to use, and how quickly they get real value and lower total cost of ownership.
On the flip side.
Sridhar: We also consistently hear a lot of feedback that some of our competitors' technology is highly complex and requires a ton of highly expensive engineering resources.
Sridhar: And with complexity comes risk. What is one step in Snowflake? It's 10 on some other platform. That's 10 times more chances to engineer a mistake. It's just not that scalable. And the joy of Snowflake is that it works right out of the box.
Sridhar: We're helping our customers drive down costs. For example, Snowpark is generating one data engineering win after another. We've had multiple customers saying that they have saved at least 50% migrating to Snowflake from other providers.
Sridhar: And that's how our technology sells itself and why Snowpark is on track to be roughly 3% of our revenue.
Sridhar: Snowflake superpower is the ability to simplify the implementation of all the popular enterprise data architecture patterns that customers want. It's what makes us the best enterprise-grade technology for the warehouse, the lakehouse, and data mesh architectures.
Sridhar: We give our customers real architectural choice, without trade-offs on enterprise capabilities, and they love it.
Speaker Change: Warner Bros. Discovery uses Snowflake to unify data across their vast portfolio, including streaming, gaming, news, and studio divisions. This helps them deliver personalized entertainment recommendations to millions of viewers.
Speaker Change: And global hotel chain Hyatt is using Snowflake to better understand guests' preferences across their properties, helping craft a more personalized stay for guests throughout their travel journey.
Speaker Change: And we are accelerating across the business. As I said, our foot's on the gas when it comes to product innovation. Just last week, we held our Build Developer Summit for more than 10,000 attendees worldwide.
Speaker Change: We made some key announcements in our core business, like the general availability of Unistore, an internal marketplace, and cutting-edge AI innovations like Snowflake Intelligence, a platform to create data agents.
Speaker Change: Our AI adoption continues to be strong. As of the end of Q3, we have over 1,000 deployed use cases, which you can think of as individual projects we manage with our customers.
Speaker Change: of our AI and ML products in production deployment. More than 3200 accounts are now using our AI and ML features.
Speaker Change: Equally exciting is the momentum that our latest data engineering features are seeing. Our push into interoperability and transforming data that previously would not have been addressed by Snowflake is proving to be a key differentiator with our customers.
Speaker Change: These features are now north of a $200 million run rate as of the end of Q3.
Speaker Change: We are also partnering with Microsoft and ServiceNow to increase data interoperability, making it easier for our customers to bring data in and out of Snowflake to build and run applications faster.
Speaker Change: As we launch new products like Unistorm, Snowflake Open Catalog, and others.
Speaker Change: If you're fine-tuning a go-to-market motion that brings together engineering, product, marketing, and sales to rapidly launch, test, iterate, and scale products, it is giving us a scalable way to broaden our footprint with our customers and also acquire new ones.
Speaker Change: Our product innovation is fueling alignment with our cloud infrastructure partners.
Speaker Change: Through our collaboration with AWS, we have booked over $3.9 billion over the past four quarters, an increase of 68% versus the preceding four quarters.
Speaker Change: Looking at our results in Q3, I can tell you that these shifts are working and enabling us to drive multi-product adoption and further strengthen our position in the market.
Speaker Change: Finally, I want to talk about the tectonic shifts happening in the world of data.
Speaker Change: We are seeing massive adoption of open data formats, especially truly open formats like Apache Icebergs. We are justifiably proud of our support for and our investments in Icebergs and the Snowflake Open Catalog based on Apache Polaris that is seeing rapid adoption with developers and enterprises.
Speaker Change: Similarly, it is clear that AI is going to change how people consume data. Not only is AI going to make structured and unstructured data more interchangeable, it is also going to heavily influence areas like business intelligence.
Speaker Change: With our unmatched product capability, ease of use, architectural flexibility, comprehensive governance, and prescient bets in Iceberg, Polaris, Cortex, and many others, we are well positioned to be the data platform of choice for enterprises for the next decade.
Speaker Change: Our intended acquisition of DataVolo strengthens our foundation to deliver an extensible and flexible connectivity platform for unstructured as well as structured data. It accelerates our ability to bring in and vastly simplify data engineering workloads for our customers.
Speaker Change: On the consumption side, the GA of Snowflake Notebooks, as well as the success and adoption of products like Cortex AI, position us well to take advantage of the new capabilities that AI will enable us to create.
Speaker Change: As you've probably seen, we just announced a partnership with Anthropic to bring their most powerful models to our customers through Snowflake Cortex AI.
Speaker Change: This gives enterprises the choice to build cutting-edge AI applications using the model of their choice with the ease, built-in security, and governance of the Snowflake platform.
Speaker Change: The cost efficiency, flexibility, and extensibility we deliver are why iconic brands like Accor, Chipotle, Comcast, Hyatt, Kraft Heinz, NBCUniversal, Sanofi, Toyota, and thousands more are betting their business on Snowflake.
Speaker Change: As we move forward, we have a big opportunity to continue to expand with AI throughout the data journey continuum. This isn't just our product vision, it's the ask from some of our most significant customers.
Speaker Change: They see the ease of use and quality and savings we provide today and want us to expand further so they can reduce even more costs by Snowflake handling more and more of their data journey.
Speaker Change: We see a day when we can power the end-to-end data lifecycle for our customers.
Speaker Change: and that's our North Star. We come at this from a position of strength that we will continue to leverage.
Speaker Change: Our core long-term differentiation of an easy-to-use, simple, efficient, integrated product with comprehensive governance, cross-cloud consistency, and collaboration will continue to set us apart.
Speaker Change: This is exciting, and I look forward to sharing more and more of our progress along the way. With that, Mike, I'll turn it over to you. Thank you, Sridhar. Q3 was a quarter of strong execution across revenue, bookings, and margins, growth in a core business of performance.
Net revenue retention rate stabilized at 127%.
Mike: New product initiatives are beginning to contribute to growth. As Sridhar mentioned, Snoke Park is well on track to represent 3% of product revenue and growing nicely.
Mike: With approximately 500 counts adopting Iceberg and storage remaining 11% of our consumption, we have seen minimal headwinds from customers moving to Iceberg. We believe our contribution from data engineering features like Snowpark, Dynamic Tables, Connectors, and Snowpite Streaming
will more than offset the potential loss of storage revenue.
Mike: Bookings were strong in the quarter and we're seeing a large deal volume increase. We signed three 50 million dollar plus total contract value deals and we expect this momentum to continue in Q4. We added 18 global 2,000 customers in the quarter.
Turning to margins for Q3.
non-GAAP product gross margin of 76% stabilized sequentially.
Mike: Non-GAAP operating margin of 6% exceeded our guidance, benefiting from revenue outperformance, deficiencies in R&D, and expenses related to our new Bay Area office space being pushed to Q4.
Mike: Our non-GAAP-adjusted free cash flow margin was 9%, driven by strong bookings. We continue to see approximately 80% of our customers paying it annually in advance.
Mike: In Q3, we issued $1.15 billion in 0% convertible senior notes due in 2027 and $1.15 billion in 0% convertible senior notes due in 2029.
Mike: Proceeds from the offering were used to pay for the cap calls and concurrent share of a purchase. We expect to use the remaining proceeds to fund stock for purchases and potential acquisition, and for general corporate purposes.
Mike: Year-to-date, we have used $1.9 billion to repurchase 14.8 million shares at a weighted average price per share of $130.87.
Mike: We have $2 billion remaining on our authorization through March 2027. Our share count guidance does not include the impact from potential upcoming stock purchases.
Mike: We ended the quarter with $5 billion in cash, cash equivalents, short-term and long-term investments.
Now, let's turn to guidance.
Mike: For the fourth quarter, we expect product revenue between $906 and $911 million, representing 23% year-over-year growth.
Mike: We are increasing our FY25 product revenue guidance. We now expect full-year product revenue of approximately $3.43 billion, representing 29% year-over-year growth.
Mike: This includes contributions from our newer product features and product efficiency headwinds. We view product efficiencies as a normal part of our business, so we will not be breaking out those assumptions going forward. Turning to margins.
Mike: In FY25, we are increasing our non-GAAP product gross margin guidance to 76%, our non-GAAP operating margin guidance to 5%. We expect approximately 26% non-GAAP adjusted free cash flow margin for the year.
Speaker Change: As Sridhar mentioned, we have gone through a rigorous process of evaluating our cost structure. We believe we can invest aggressively to address the large opportunity in front of us while also being more efficient.
Speaker Change: Our innovation and revenue driving functions are being resourced to drive durable growth while also enabling us to show operating leverage for years to come. With that operator, you may now open up the line for questions.
Speaker Change: If you would like to ask a question, please press star followed by 1 on your telephone keypad. If for any reason you would like to remove that question, please press star followed by 2.
Speaker Change: Again, to ask a question, press star 1. As a reminder, if you are using a speakerphone, please remember to pick up your handset before asking your question. We will pause here briefly as questions register.
Speaker Change: The first question is from the line of Martin Murphy with J.P. Morgan. Your line is now open.
Martin Murphy: Thank you, Mike. It's impressive to see the strength here simultaneously in both the consumption revenue and
Speaker Change: the bookings, especially given the prioritization of consumption incentives this year. I'm curious to what you might attribute that, and specifically whether Iceberg Tables might have contributed at all, or whether Snowpark might have picked up in any meaningful way. Then I have a quick follow-up.
Speaker Change: I would say we're starting to see the positive benefit of Iceberg with a number of customers that are now bringing new workloads that are now being addressed by Snowflake in Iceberg tables, but I would just say it's
Speaker Change: broad-based demand across our customers. Yeah, there's a few verticals that were very strong technology, financial services, and healthcare, but it's really broad-based and we are seeing the uptick, as Sridhar was mentioning, a lot of the data engineering stuff as well, too, and Snowpark is part of that.
Great to hear. And Sridhar, I believe you had mentioned...
displacing the competition over and over again.
Speaker Change: that stood out to me. I'm curious if you saw an increase in those competitive displacements during Q3 and what you think might be triggering it because we always hear that data sharing is unparalleled, but you had released a slew of AI-related products. And I'm also wondering if you think that that might be swaying some of those competitive accounts over.
Speaker Change: At one level, the products that we are releasing, that we release, makes everybody feel great about sort of the future of the platform, what they can do with it both today and also tomorrow.
Speaker Change: The kind of things that people are already getting done with Cortex AI Search and Unlist is already pretty impressive. But when it comes to the displacement,
Speaker Change: I would say that it's the core aspects of the product, which is the ease of use, the faster time to value.
Speaker Change: The lack of needing a very large team to set up deployments and maintain them as we go along.
Those are the things that contribute most.
Speaker Change: to people then, you know, like trying something and coming back to Snowflake and going, this is a much better way to make progress with data. And this is the reason why we obsess about making sure Cortex, for example, is integrated very tightly with everything else. You build a chatbot on Snowflake, it is automatically going to obey all of the permissions on the data that is underneath. And that's the magic of Snowflake. Krishna, any additional thoughts? So the governance continues to be an important region and we continue.
Speaker Change: We are going to continue to invest in security, privacy, and compliance in addition to our needs.
Thank you very much. Thank you.
Thank you very much and congrats.
Thank you, Mark. Thank you for your question.
Speaker Change: Next question is from the line of Keith Weiss with Morgan Family. Your line is now open.
Speaker Change: Excellent, thank you guys for taking the question and congratulations on a really solid quarter.
Speaker Change: Mike, a question for you just in terms of like the strength of the quarter from your commentary things like the core business like the core data warehousing business was really the standout in the quarter and that firming up and the NRR firming up
Speaker Change: But I was wondering if you could give us some kind of visibility into the ramp that you're seeing with the new AI products like Cortex. And how does that compare to what you saw with Snowpark, if we think about them in the same time in their evolution?
Speaker Change: That's a top-line question, and also a bottom-line question for you. Last quarter, we talked about sort of accelerating investments, particularly in distribution. It sounds like that's being somewhat offset by being able to find sort of redundancies or headcount reductions, because we didn't really see it in the headcount number. Like, that net addition was relatively modest.
Speaker Change: So, it seems like you guys were able to kind of drive investment, but also find sort of like nets to take out of headcount, is that the right way to think about it?
Speaker Change: Yeah, so on your first question, when I talk about the core business, the core business is data warehousing with data engineering. What we're talking about is the newer data engineering features that Sridhar was talking about, that there's a lot of data engineering that's done in Snowflake.
that was very strong as well. We are seeing.
the uptick in new products, I would say.
Speaker Change: Cortex is starting to take off. It's still very much in the early innings, and we're very optimistic of what that's going to do in the future based upon what we're seeing. And Snowpark continues to track, as expected, will be 3% of our revenue for the year and growing very nicely year over year.
Speaker Change: In terms of the efficiencies, we've gone through and done a lot of performance management, especially in the sales organization they've been hiring, and there's going to be a lot of hiring in the sales organization this quarter they're doing. And we really have
Speaker Change: really looked across the company at combining teams together where possible And we're not replacing backfills as quickly because of that and that's why we're seeing the operating savings that we're doing. There is no mass
Speaker Change: RIF or anything like that. Don't think about that. We're not doing that. It's normal performance management and really being thoughtful of where we put people.
Speaker Change: and many more. I hope you enjoyed this video. If you did, please click the like button and subscribe to my channel.
Speaker Change: Thank you for your question. Next question is from the line of Cash Rangin with Goldman Sachs. Your line is now open.
Speaker Change: Hi, thank you very much. One for you, Sridhar, and one for Mike. Sridhar, there is a narrative which you will definitely dispute that the core of the Snowflake data platform, that structured data, does not really have a long runway in the world of generative AI.
Speaker Change: And that also, Snowflake has a lot to prove with respect to generative AI on the unstructured data.
Speaker Change: What proof points can you talk to the quarter that would invalidate that bearish view?
and reinforce your conviction.
Speaker Change: And one for you, Mike, with the headwinds from storage not being as much as was dialed in. Should we safely assume that, you know, you've got into product revenue 29% for the year, take away three points for store-bought container services, that the core is actually at a point where you can...
Speaker Change: see it being stable going to next year. I know you're not giving guidance, and if we can start to think about, dream the dream of all the new products being largely incremental to that growth rate. Thank you so much. Congratulations.
Thank you, guys.
on the, you know, core business side.
Speaker Change: still is going to be pretty important, getting the most important data about your about your business.
but increasingly being able to act on it.
quickly in real time.
Speaker Change: He's the thing that is going to set great companies apart. If you look at the best companies that have been created in the past, like, two, two and a half decades...
Speaker Change: These are companies that have integrated data into the core of how they are operating.
Speaker Change: When I talk to customers, not just about the analytics, the view of clean data, but also about being able to act on it, being able to see trends, being able to figure out things like guest experiences, like our customers, Hyatt and Disney, do at scale, there's a very long runway because analytics...
Speaker Change: flows over seamlessly and fluidly into things like machine learning and AI then becomes even more of an accelerant.
Speaker Change: because you can now go from unstructured data to structured data very, very easily. And that's the magic of products like Cortex AI. And the new things that we announced in Build, where you can bring multi-modal models. Imagine a world in which you just write a SQL statement that goes to act on a PDF and produces a bunch of structured information out on the other side.
Speaker Change: It redefines what you and I think of as analytics because just a lot more can be done.
Speaker Change: And so that's the world that we are driving towards, and that's where investments in companies like Datavolo that bring even more data into Snowflake is exciting and empowering for us as a data platform.
Speaker Change: And then on the other side, when it comes to unstructured data or just AI applications, as I said in my remarks, we have over a thousand deployed use cases. And in all of them, you know, these are not tied deployments. We work with our customers, we make sure that they get value, you know, from it. That's the first thing that I tell all our customers, AI needs to be a business accelerant. It's not a hobby. And the products that we have created, which do things like take trustability, the work that we are doing with the Truera acquisition, for example, that brings observability to how people create AI applications are the ones that are creating rock solid applications. And very increasingly, the difference between structured and unstructured is going to be less and less meaningful as we go forward.
Speaker Change: I mean, in terms of examples, you know, there are a ton of them, Siemens, Bayer, these are all folks, Zoom, these are all folks that have used our AI product, gotten immense value and talked publicly about them. So I feel very good about where we are executing on that site.
Speaker Change: And Cash, on your question on the stability of the business, as I said, the core business is very stable and strong. You know, we just had a very good quarter, but more importantly, our NRR has remained at 127% the last two quarters.
Speaker Change: We're guiding to 23%. I do wanna remind you Q4 has the most number of holidays in it and there is some.
Speaker Change: seasonality that we experienced during that period of time. But our business is very strong and I feel really good about next year right now where we're sitting. And why I say that is because
Speaker Change: We've really built a good muscle in our sales organization this year for really identifying new workloads that customers are going to move into production next year, and we have a very good backlog of those things that our sales people are calling for next year, including Q4 as well.
and Sridhar Ramaswamy. Thank you. Thank you.
Great to see this turnaround. Thank you so much. Congrats.
and many more. Thank you. Thank you.
Speaker Change: Thank you for your question. Next question is from the line of Remo Lincho with Barclays. Your line is now open.
Speaker Change: Hey, thank you. Sridhar, can you talk a little bit about the acquisition from today? Historically, you always said you wanted to do some ETL, but there's obviously quite a few ETL players in the market. How do you see that evolving between what you want to do, what the other players want to do, and what does it bring to Snowflake?
Speaker Change: I mean, first of all, these are all very, very, very large spaces. The overall vision, especially with the interoperable data that's upon us.
Speaker Change: We think that there is a very large opportunity for Snowflake to help our customers act on all of their data.
Speaker Change: not just the gold data that they used to put into Snowflake for analytics.
Speaker Change: anecdotal but the kind of examples that I get from talking to our customers is they have hundreds sometimes thousand times as much data sitting in cloud storage as they will do in a structured data platform and more and more they also feel like it's important that they own that and that data.
Speaker Change: And so you're seeing a shift in which things like application data is getting de-siloed, deconstructed so that, you know, great new things that you can imagine both for data transformations, data engineering, but also AI is going to happen. And this is the context in which something like a DataVolo is really important for us. It comes with over a hundred different connectors out of the box.
Speaker Change: It is going to run as part of Snowflake. It can also be deployed in customer VPCs, which lets us bring data in from places where normally we would not be able to run Snowflake on. And so it's really a force multiplier for the data that our data engineering pipelines can take on, but our AI products can be built on. But as I said, this is a very, very large space, estimated just data engineering data products as a whole, we think will be on the order of several hundred billion dollars 10 years from now. And so there's going to be lots of companies. Our value add is this easy, integrated, highly efficient platform that we can bring for our customers.
and things like Datavolo are an important piece here. Christian.
Christian: I think you covered it well and of course we have plenty of partners also doing data integration and the reality is there's so many sources of data. A big area of focus of Data Volo was the unstructured data that Sridhar mentioned.
Christian: Okay, perfect. And Mike, if you look at this quarter, it's a much better performance congrats for me as well. If you think about the question that everyone is going to ask is like, is it economy or are you guys executing better? Is there any comments you can make in terms of what you're seeing in the field from just end to marketing better?
Speaker Change: I would say from the economy it's very similar to what I said last quarter. It's not euphoric, but it's good, it's not bad, and I think we are just executing very well and we are really seeing
Speaker Change: the results of our go-to-market efforts that we've had this year and really working to identify new workloads rather than just trying to focus on bookings and I think that's paying off right now and it's forcing our sales people to be closer to customers.
Okay, perfect. Makes sense. Thank you. Congrats.
Speaker Change: Thank you for your question. Next question is from the line of Kirk Maturin with Evercore ISI. Your line is now open.
Speaker Change: Yeah, thanks very much. I'll echo the congrats on a nice quarter. Sridhar, obviously we're going to hear a lot more about autonomous agents over the next year from a lot of providers in the market. Can you just talk about what that means for consumption on snowflake data platforms, meaning it would seem that agents are going to be heavy consumers of data. Just kind of curious about how you think about that opportunity as this becomes a little bit more of a ubiquitous sort of topic.
Speaker Change: It's a good question, but, you know, I always focus on customer value. It's important because that will drive consumption.
Speaker Change: And so with the products that we have released, like Cortex Search, for example, you can build a pretty credible chat bot and play with it and use it at low frequency for something like $10. That's our goal to make technology easy. Consumption is a consequence when there is broad use.
Speaker Change: Having said that, our AI investments have always had a very strong focus on trustworthiness, on reliability.
Speaker Change: In fact, the three things that I always talk about when I talk to our customers or our teams about AI is our AI is easy, it is efficient, and it is trusted. So this is what lets our customers create chatbots that can provide citations.
Speaker Change: So they can be sure of the answers that they get. Similarly, with Cortex Analysts, we've been working.
Speaker Change: on increasing the reliability, so that when they get a structured answer to a question, they can actually be sure that it's the right answer.
Speaker Change: The cool thing about Snowflake Intelligent, especially in conjunction with our partnership with Anthropic, is it now provides the ability to tie all of these things together. So if you're a salesperson, instead of searching first and right to see, hey, what action item did you agree to after the last meeting, and then perhaps going to Snowflake to find what our consumption trends with a particular customer, and then maybe updating Salesforce, we look forward to a world in which actions like this can be done off of a single interface. And the natural consequence then is how do you turn this into a periodic task, something that is done on your behalf in the background, so that it can
Speaker Change: tell you if there is a problem. This is where things like anomaly detection, taking automated action.
Speaker Change: becomes pretty interesting. But we provide technology with a view towards what creates value. We feel very confident that you can think of agents as essentially the 21st century version of cron jobs that we all used to run. That's the real power that agents provide with a lot more sophistication.
Speaker Change: and it's an enabling value for our customers that we think we can be embedded even more deeply in their business and absolutely that will also drive a lot of consumption.
Speaker Change: A lot of our heavy AI consumption, by the way, comes from things like people being able to write a single SQL statement that can do sentiment detection or that can do summarization across a million pieces of customer feedback. Previously, that used to be like a little machine learning project that a team needed to do. At this point, that's a piece of SQL that someone out of college can write in five minutes. That's the utility that we get from it, and it's the same pattern with agents as well.
Speaker Change: That's really helpful. Mike, just a really quick one. International is obviously a big opportunity for you. How do you feel like you're positioned, you know, in sort of Europe and Asia-Pac as you head into 25? Thanks again.
I think we're positioned very well going into Europe.
Speaker Change: We've really been focused on the higher end of the market and we're going to focus more on the mid-market in Europe and APJ continues to grow very nicely. We're seeing strong
Speaker Change: growth in Japan in particular. We're starting to see stuff in India, Korea. Australia has always done very well for us and New Zealand, believe it or not, is a very good market for, a small market, but a very strong market for us.
Speaker Change: Fun fact, we power most of the government agencies in New Zealand and they do way more sharing of data between each other than most of our U.S. government agencies do.
Thank you all.
Speaker Change: Thank you for your question. Next question is from the line of Brad Zelnick with Deutsche Bank. Your line is now open.
Brad Zelnick: Oh, great. Thank you so much and congrats. Really, really great to see that.
Brad Zelnick: the pace of innovation showing up in results. I wanted to ask, how are customers using Cortex and making it available in their organizations? And how much of it should we think of as driving incremental consumption versus something maybe they were already doing with conventional SQL queries?
Speaker Change: I think that generally the kind of use cases that Cortex AI enables are pretty distinct from what used to be possible with SQL.
Let's see if we can chime in in a second.
Speaker Change: But let's face it, if you wanted to go through all of the notes written by a sales team on use cases and analyze it, most of the time the project wouldn't even happen. Recently, this is a self-referential example of us using our own products.
Speaker Change: One of the things that we wanted to do was we wanted better insight into use cases that our sales team had created.
Speaker Change: but the idea of clicking through a UI and 50,000 different use cases to figure out what was going on is not something you can generally find volunteers for. But it turns out you can write a few queries that can do a pretty amazing job of inferring structured information from all of these notes that are out there. And we were able to do something that honestly would never have gotten done as a project before. It's these kinds of things that I think
Speaker Change: I think the Cortex family of products will enable. But again, we focus on value creation, what's the additional value that the customer gets that we get.
Speaker Change: Yeah, I think many of the use cases or scenarios that Sridhar covered are around text analytics.
Speaker Change: which is very adjacent to where we've been for a long time. But as we announce and build, we've expanded beyond text to support images, audio, and video. So that's one part of its analytics.
Speaker Change: The other piece that we're seeing a lot of momentum and interest is with Cortex Search and Cortex Analyst, which is how do we democratize access to data, and that is going quite well.
Speaker Change: Exciting stuff. Mike, just maybe a follow-up for you. Based on your comments on Iceberg, are you baking in less headwind for the year into the guide? And then what's the latest on how customers are thinking about the mix of where data will live? Thanks so much.
Speaker Change: As I said, I'm not going to be talking about different performance improvements going forward. It's factored into the guide with where we see them. But as I mentioned in my prepared remarks,
Speaker Change: We think with what we're seeing with some of the new data engineering features that that will more than offset any potential storage revenue we lose.
Speaker Change: as a result of people moving data out of Snowflake. We think net-net, it's just gonna open more opportunity for us as a much bigger opportunity. The amount of data that is not in Snowflake today that is accessible to us through Iceberg.
Thanks for making that clear. Thanks for taking my questions.
Speaker Change: Thank you for your question. Next question is from the line of Brent Bill with Jeffries, your line is now open.
Speaker Change: Thanks. Sridhar, just on federal, you mentioned New Zealand powering many of their agencies.
Speaker Change: How would you characterize where you're at in the federal journey, and given what's just happened in the last month, there's been a lot of concern about efficiency in the federal government. Can you just give us your thoughts?
Speaker Change: about what's going to happen here over the next couple of years.
Speaker Change: We recently did a small acquisition of a company called Nightshift, which will better position us in the federal business. We continue to think of it as a pretty large opportunity for us.
Speaker Change: And, you know, I would even say that efficiency is actually good news for Snowflake in the sense that we are way better at processing huge amounts of data and letting customers, including the federal government, use it effectively. I don't have a lot more color to add right now, but it continues to be a focus. We spend a lot of time in making sure that that business grows. We've gotten a number of certifications just, you know, like prerequisite. We feel good about where we are. Stay tuned for more news. I'll just add to that. As you know, the U.S. federal space is a very, very, very small piece of our business today.
Speaker Change: We feel good about what we're doing and we think there's a lot of upside in the federal space over the next couple years.
Speaker Change: Thanks, Mike. And just for you, Mike, on the big deals, you mentioned three deals over 50.
Speaker Change: I think you're coming up and comping a $250 million deal last Q4. Can you just talk about what you're seeing in these bigger transactions? Are you seeing more transactions that are smaller? Are you seeing some of these bigger elephants starting to roam again? How would you characterize what you're seeing in the pipe for Q4?
Speaker Change: I think Q4 is going to be a very strong bookings quarter like it normally is, and we have a number of large deals we're working on that are renewals with existing customers with growth in them.
Thank you.
Great, thanks.
Speaker Change: Thank you for your question. Next question is from the line of Mike Sikos with Needham & Co. Your line is now open.
Thank you.
Speaker Change: Thanks, guys. This is Matt Coletreon for Mike Sikos over at Needham. This is the healthiest quarter-over-quarter addition to RPO and CRPO during an October quarter, stretching back over multiple years and potentially a record 3Q for the company. Can you help us think about what drove the strong growth and did the two top 10 customers Mike alluded to being on monthly commitments last quarter sign new commitments during the quarter?
Speaker Change: We didn't have big commitments from those customers in the quarter and what I would say is is a lot of the current RPO growth in particular just has to do with larger customers based upon when their renewals are coming up or when they're running out of capacity and renew but it was a strong growth quarter.
Speaker Change: total RPO and current RPO and you're seeing that in the actual reported revenue number and what we're guiding to for next quarter.
Speaker Change: And overall, the little bit of color, I end up talking to a lot of customers that I will add here.
Speaker Change: is our conversations are inevitably focused on there are places where we can help them get more efficient, where we can help them drive more, you know, more revenue.
Speaker Change: the more effectively our sales team is able to do that, and they've did a wonderful job in the first two, three quarters of the year, the more it reflects itself naturally in renewals. And so I would say that this is a consequence of the hard work that our sales teams are doing day in and day out to further the business of our customers.
Speaker Change: That's great to hear and then the trend in sequential customer additions remains mixed. Given the go-to-market changes, when do you expect to begin to start showing an inflection here? Is that more of a FY 26 event or how are you thinking about that?
Speaker Change: You know, in terms of net additions, I expect Q4 to be a good net addition quarter. And I think you'll see the fruits of our labor this year flow into 2026.
Awesome, thanks so much guys.
Thank you for your question.
Speaker Change: Next question is from the line of Michael Tieran with Wells Fargo, if you don't mind if I open.
and many more. Thank you. Thank you.
Speaker Change: Hey, thanks very much. I appreciate you taking the questions. Maybe on the expansion rates holding stable here, I want to ask about that metric just in context with the go-to-market shift towards consumption, and maybe you could just help give us some context around how that consumption focus may be impacting the trajectory we're seeing on expansion rates. If there are common plays you're seeing work across customers, and if you're starting to hit a point where you're feeling comfortable that retention rates are starting to hit a baseline,
Speaker Change: You know, I think I'm never going to guide to net revenue retention, by the way. But I do feel it feels pretty stable based on what we're seeing in there. And a lot of that is driven by our core business with the addition of some of our older customers starting to use some of these newer features as well, too. So stay tuned. That's not something we're going to guide to.
Speaker Change: Okay, it's still helpful commentary. And then just a follow-up on one of the comments around the offsets to storage headwinds. I was just hoping you could help us think through the sequencing of those. Is that something that
Speaker Change: can immediately help offset any storage headwinds tied to iceberg or is that something that over time the customer profile, the spend profile, helps adjust for those things? Is there just a sequence of events we should all be mindful of there?
Speaker Change: Yeah, as I said, I'm really not seeing a big storage headwind as a result of iceberg and to the extent any of our customers do move data off, it will be more than offset by the
we're seeing in
Speaker Change: data engineering, the newer data engineering features, and as I also said, we are starting to see a positive impact of Iceberg with new workloads that were never in Snowflake before. Now customers are using Snowflake on OpenFile Iceberg formats.
Speaker Change: I'll stress something that I said earlier, which is customers typically have hundred to thousand times more data sitting in cloud storage.
with the things that we have done with data ensuring.
Speaker Change: or even things like Cortex AI, which you can think of as AI extensions to what you can do with SQL or with nifty new paradigms like dynamic tables, which is a very efficient way to run data pipelines.
Speaker Change: and soon to be combined with things like multi-modal models. All of a sudden you can imagine a data pipeline that is looking at video transcripts, generating text from it, doing sentiment detection off of it.
all off of a few SQL queries.
Speaker Change: because of these open data estates that are sitting there. These, again, are use cases that someone honestly would simply not have conceived of in a pre-iceberg, pre-AI kind of world. And that's the magic of Snowflake, which is to take all of these complex technologies but put them into a form that lots of people can get value from them. And so that's the big opportunity rather than an itty-bitty tactical thing of some data within Snowflake perhaps moving to an iceberg format. I think, you know, I don't think it's just such a big deal.
Yep, that all sounds great. Thanks very much.
Thank you for your question.
Speaker Change: Next question is from the line of Alec Zukin with Wolf Research, you don't want to have that open.
Speaker Change: Hey guys, so maybe taking another stab at the iceberg question, I guess maybe Sridhar, in terms of what you're seeing with some of the kind of first mover customers that are seeing an opportunity with Snowflake to kind of attack a much broader data estate, what are you seeing in terms of that data volume uplift, kind of that put and take from storage to incremental services that you're able to unlock?
Speaker Change: As I was saying, I really think of this as a big new opportunity.
Speaker Change: where all of a sudden a lot of our customers are realizing that with things like our iceberg support, they can do things with the Snowflake Compute Engine.
Speaker Change: even to run analytics, for example, on historic data that is sitting in that is sitting in data estates.
Speaker Change: that simply would not have been possible before. And those are the incremental use cases that we are seeing that flow into this category called data ensuring, which we gave you some color on. And it's really the combination then of like iceberg, but then AI features or data pipelining features like dynamic tables that combines to create new opportunities for us.
Speaker Change: Anything else to add Christian? No, maybe what I would say is that the customer pattern is it's easier to say I have data in Snowflake and it's working well.
Speaker Change: Let me try to use Snowflake against data that is already sitting in cloud storage. And those are the use cases that we're seeing prioritized first, and that's what we're seeing a large increase.
Speaker Change: month-over-month the amount of data that is being made available to snowflake via iceberg tables, that leads to additional consumption and that is going ahead of any storage headwinds.
Speaker Change: Do you want to add a comment on how Polaris is important here? That's also a super interesting trend. At Summit, we introduced Polaris Catalog.
Since then, we donated to the Apaches Helper Foundation.
Speaker Change: We let customers host it themselves, we also have a Snowflake hosted version, which is our Snowflake Open Catalog.
And we are seeing very, very strong interest from organizations.
Speaker Change: across the world on being able to rely on a truly open source catalog that makes more and more data available to Snowflake, but also while honoring the desire and the promise of being able to interoperate with other engines.
Speaker Change: Perfect. And then maybe just to follow up, Mike, for you.
Speaker Change: Can you maybe talk through some of the sales changes, whether in terms of performance management in terms of
Speaker Change: Should we be thinking about any incremental conservatism as we look at our models for next year versus what seems to be an improving budget backdrop spending environment potentially going into next year with some of your largest verticals like sensor and tech and maybe anything we should take into account as we look at our models for next year.
Speaker Change: Yeah, I would just say that our sales leaders have gone through and really...
Speaker Change: You know, typically salespeople always wait until the end of the year to do performance management based upon how they have performed.
Speaker Change: and sales leaders now realize you can do performance management throughout the year.
Speaker Change: and we started doing a lot more performance management in Q3.
Speaker Change: And we've been backfilling those people with the right skill sets of what we're looking for.
Speaker Change: And I'm not going to talk about conservatism or whatever. I did for the quarter, and we feel good, and I feel good about what we're...
Speaker Change: seeing next year. The only thing I would remind you is when you're building your models for next year, Q1, we do not have the benefit of leap year that we had last year, so there's one less day in it. That does have an impact on the year-over-year growth rates when you're building your models.
Speaker Change: And the other small additional color that I will add here is that, you know, our sales teams, as part of the consumption push, have been evolving a whole new science around how do you, you know, go from activity to use cases, to use cases one, to what's in deployment.
Speaker Change: And this is part, this is the basis of things like the performance management. And I have to just give them enormous credit for their ability to just manage this process a lot more rationally. And it's being able to do that, that even shines the light on things like.
Speaker Change: what are best-in-class techniques for driving the business forward. And part of you see that reflected in the results, and that's what makes me feel positive about how the team is operating. They've done a really wonderful job.
Perfect. Thank you guys. Congratulations.
Thank you for your question.
Speaker Change: Next question is from the line of Brad Sills with Bank of America. Your line is now open.
Brad Sills: Oh great, thank you so much. Question for you Sridhar, I couldn't help but notice some of the comments you made on the strength you're seeing with AWS. I'd love to get an update from you on kind of where the incremental focus has been on with the big hyperscaler partners and go-to-market. It seems to be having a real positive impact.
Speaker Change: That's right. As you know, we have a great relationship with AWS, but also with Azure. We work together a lot and there's an excellent relationship, you know, at the exec level, but also at the field level.
Speaker Change: It is absolutely the case that, you know, for example, that AWS plus Snowflake is a great solution, as is Azure plus Snowflake.
Speaker Change: I would say we have some, let's call it, like, you know, shoots.
Speaker Change: of grass on our relations with GCP in terms of what is what is possible there.
Speaker Change: We are working with that to make it happen. As I said, all of this is in the context of a data platform industry that is going to be expanding pretty massively over the 10 years, so everybody sees the opportunity. But then it's a question of lining up every single team within multi-thousand person companies to collaborate effectively, and you should definitely expect to see more of that.
Speaker Change: I would add that an area of common ground with with the hyperscalers has been this
Speaker Change: collaboration around Apache Iceberg as effectively the standard way to represent data so that we can interoperate.
Speaker Change: Unlike previous formats that were open in name only and controlled by a single company that could arbitrarily change its mind about what was open and what was closed, Iceberg is seen as the format and, you know, I dare say that Iceberg is the VHS and the old formats are the Betamax of formats and we are very happy to see this because this is great for our customers and it's great for Snowflake.
Speaker Change: That's great to hear. Thanks, Sridhar. And then one for you, Mike, if I might.
Speaker Change: You've said in the past that the strength you're seeing this year, new signings of new workloads and things like Snowpark and Cortex are going to lead to some consumption ramp heading into next year. We'd just love to get an update from you on how you see that ramp heading into next year, just given it sounds like you're seeing some real positive momentum on the new product side. Thank you.
Speaker Change: Well, I'm not going to guide for that next year, but it is starting to be
meaningful contributors to our revenue.
The only thing we've called out in terms of...
Speaker Change: dollars and we called that at the beginning of the year. What we thought is Snowpark is well on track to be three percent of our revenue, but the newer things, dynamic tables, is really starting to take off and that has an impact on consumption. I expect.
Speaker Change: Notebooks is going to be a meaningful thing for us for the data science persona, which is going to lead to more consumption in Snowflake and everything we've talked about before. So stay tuned for our Q4 call when we'll give you more color on what we're seeing for next year with these new features in particular.
Thank you very much.
Great. Thanks, Mike.
Speaker Change: Thank you for your question. We are now out of time for additional questions, so I will be passing the call back to Sridhar for any closing remarks.
Sridhar: Thank you. Before we end the call, I want to leave you all with this.
Sridhar: You have great momentum and I couldn't be more proud of how you are executing day in and day out.
Our growth rate at this scale is incredibly impressive.
Sridhar: And we have our foot on the gas. Our core business is strong and our new products are driving revenue growth. And our operational rigor is enabling us to drive growth and profitability for years to come. Thank you all for joining us.
Speaker Change: and many more. Thank you for watching. I hope you enjoyed this video. If you did, please click the like button, subscribe to my channel, and follow me on Twitter.