Q3 2024 Creative Realities Inc Earnings Call - Q&A
Speaker Change: Good morning. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to Creative Reality's 2024 Third Quarter Earnings Conference Call.
Speaker Change: This call will be recorded and a copy will be available on the company's website at CRI.com following the completion of the call. The company has prepared remarks summarizing the interim results for the third quarter along with additional industry and company updates.
Speaker Change: Joining me on the call today is Rick Mills, CEO, and William Logan, CFO. Mr. Logan, you may begin.
William Logan: Thank you and good morning everyone. Welcome to our earnings call for the third quarter ended September 30th, 2024. I would like to take this opportunity to remind you that our remarks today will include forward looking statements.
William Logan: The words anticipated, will, believes, expects, intends, plans, estimates, projects, should, may, propose, and similar expressions, or the negative versions of such words or expressions as they relate to us, our management, or our operations, are intended to identify forward-looking statements.
William Logan: Actual results may differ materially from those contemplated by these forward-looking statements.
William Logan: Factors that could cause these results to differ materially are set forth in our annual report on Form 10-K filed with the SEC for the year ended December 31st, 2023, our quarterly report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended March 31st, 2024, and the company's subsequent filings with the SEC.
William Logan: Any forward-looking statements that we make on this call are based on assumptions as of today, and we undertake no obligation to update these statements as a result of new information or future events.
William Logan: During this call, we will present both GAAP and non-GAAP financial measures.
William Logan: A reconciliation of GAP to non-GAP measures is included in our public filings and in our earnings release that was issued this morning.
Speaker Change: We believe the use of certain non-gap measures, such as adjusted EBITDA and several other important key performance indicators, represent meaningful ways to track our performance. It is now my pleasure to introduce Rick Mills, CEO and Chairman of Creative Realities.
Rick Mills: Thanks, Will. Good morning, everybody. Thank you for joining the call. Once again, we posted record quarterly results. This time for Q3, our fifth consecutive period of record quarterly revenue.
Rick Mills: We remain on track for the best year ever. I am pleased to report the following.
Rick Mills: Record third quarter revenue of $14.4 million up 25% from $11.6 million a year ago.
Rick Mills: Gross profit of $6.6 million, up 24.5% from $5.3 million in 2023.
Rick Mills: adjusted EBITDA of approximately 2.3 million against 1.5 million last year. That's an increase of 53%. Finally, annual recurring revenue or ARR at an annual run rate of 18.1 million.
Rick Mills: We are pleased with our results and we continue down the path towards record performance for fiscal 2024.
Rick Mills: The company has a robust pipeline of opportunities being actively pursued with multiple large contracts expected to be consummated in the coming months and quarters.
Rick Mills: Our business dev team is hard at work fostering new relationships, driving additional deployment with current customers, and working hard with new brands and companies to grow our client network.
Rick Mills: Demand remains strong across all our industry verticals, whether it be with digital menu boards, digital drive-thru, retail media networks, or IPTV solutions which we deploy in sports and entertainment venues.
Rick Mills: That demand combined with our ability to scale with a minimal impact on our cost structure has driven revenue and profitability expansion.
both year-over-year as well as sequentially from the second quarter.
Rick Mills: As a result of our sales mix, consolidated gross margin, which varies quarter to quarter, was 45.6%, roughly in line with last year.
Wow, the gross margin percentage remained.
Rick Mills: as we leverage our larger size and improved economies of scale along with some price inelasticity.
Rick Mills: As the results of our preceding four quarters show, the company's operating leverage is evident as our adjusted EBITDA as a percent of revenue
Rick Mills: which rose to 15.8% in the quarter and is 11.5% year to date.
Rick Mills: which brings our trailing 12-month adjusted EBITDA to $7.4 million or 13.6% of trailing 12-month revenue.
Rick Mills: This is ahead of our projections of a 2024 exit run rate of approximately 12% on revenue of $60 million.
Rick Mills: As you can see from the numbers, our services are clearly in demand.
Rick Mills: That said, I want to provide our investors with insights into our anticipated fourth quarter revenue.
Rick Mills: As noted in our prior calls, we are focused on targeting enterprise-grade customers for our products and services. These high-quality, large-scale customer deployments have created some delays or slowdowns.
Rick Mills: in our anticipated orders and deployments. As a result, our visibility in the remainder of the year remains somewhat murky.
Rick Mills: Given the customer deployments that remain in flux, we are unable to provide a specific estimate for the fourth quarter and full year.
Rick Mills: However, we are confident that 2024 will represent record revenue and profitability under any scenario.
Rick Mills: While we've now achieved record ARR of approximately 18.1 million on an annual run rate basis,
Rick Mills: The goal of $20 million in ARR by year-end will also be impacted should the timing of these orders or deployments in Q4 slip.
Rick Mills: Make no mistake, we are on track for our best year ever.
Rick Mills: But certain large customer orders are anticipated to push into fiscal 2025.
Nothing has been lost, just the timing is in question.
Rick Mills: We are optimistic about the future and expect to see solid growth and improved results going forward. And we anticipate providing further details and guidance about anticipated 2025 performance early next year.
Speaker Change: I will now turn it over to Will to share some additional comments on our financials.
William Logan: Thank you, Rick. An overview of our financial results for the third quarter of 2024 was provided in our earnings release.
William Logan: and Form 10-Q filed this morning, which included the condensed consolidated balance sheet as of September 30, 2024, the statement of operations and the statement of cash flows for the three and nine months ended September 30, 2024, and a detailed reconciliation of net income to EBITDA and adjusted EBITDA for the quarter ended September 30, 2024, as well as the preceding four quarters.
William Logan: We are pleased with our progress this year, having now achieved revenue of $54 million on a trailing 12-month basis. The company remains on track to finish 2024 with record results, even as we continue to evaluate our capital structure and balance sheet for further improvement, along with investigating strategic opportunities for growth.
William Logan: Now a couple of additional points of context related to the balance sheet.
William Logan: As of September 30, 2024, the company had cash on hand of approximately $0.9 million versus $2.9 million at the end of 2023. As previously mentioned, our consolidated balance sheet reflects minimal cash on hand as the company has set up a sweep instrument to apply cash against the revolving debt facility to further manage our interest expense.
William Logan: Our gross and net debt stood at approximately $11.0 million and $10.1 million, respectively, at the end of the third quarter, as compared to $15.1 million and $12.2 million, respectively, at the start of 2024.
William Logan: Our debt level rose slightly from the end of Q2 due to working capital requirements, and we anticipate, due to the nature and timing of our annual SAS-based billings, Q4 will likely be higher than current levels, in line with normal historical working capital trends.
William Logan: We have already achieved our short-term goal to deleverage below two times adjusted EBITDA.
William Logan: On a trailing 12-month basis, our leverage ratio on a gross and net basis is 1.49 and 1.37 times, respectively, down from 2.97 and 2.4 times at the beginning of the year.
William Logan: Keep in mind, our line of credit has a variable interest rate, which should reduce interest rate expense as rates ease. We remain dedicated to managing our debt as we continue to optimize our capital structure in support of organic and strategic growth.
William Logan: Our NetSuite ERP migration was finalized and up and running at the close of June.
William Logan: Our teams are utilizing this system on a day-to-day basis, and we have completed our first full financial quarterly close process in this application. While we continue to iterate to find efficiencies, we believe it will begin driving improved operating efficiency and profitability in 2025 and beyond.
Rick Mills: I'll turn it back to Rick for additional comments on our results and customer activities.
Thanks, Will.
Rick Mills: Our IPTV division, which is managing deployments at sports and entertainment venues,
Rick Mills: has been reorganized and expanded in order to continue to facilitate our actual and anticipated growth in this sector as we move into 2025.
Rick Mills: The company just completed its largest deployment of this kind during the third quarter of 2024, an entire NHL arena. We have tremendous momentum in the market moving into the new year.
Rick Mills: With regard to BCTV, this project continues to move forward, recently crossing the threshold of 200 total installations.
Rick Mills: CRI participated in an off-site, all-hands meeting with all the vendors for the TVBC project.
Rick Mills: We completed 51 site installations in the third quarter at an average sale price of $26,500.
Rick Mills: While we expect this number to increase moderately in 2025, the fourth quarter will lag on a sequential quarter-over-quarter basis as a result of the busy holiday season for bowling centers.
Rick Mills: And we have previously spoken about the ERP implementation, but our cloud operations team has launched another project which we believe will generate further differentiators for CRI.
Rick Mills: This is SOC compliance, which is a valuable credential that can strengthen the trustworthiness and credibility of our software and hosting products to our enterprise customers.
Rick Mills: The team has already made a great deal of progress and we anticipate moving towards execution of a type 1 SOC audit in late Q4 or early first quarter 2025.
Rick Mills: Before turning it back over to the operator, let me add that we've spoken with dozens of investors in the past several months at the LD Micro Conference in Los Angeles, SEMCO Capital Event in Chicago, and during other opportunities.
Rick Mills: We'll also be at the Craig Hallam conference in New York next week.
Rick Mills: where we look forward to meeting potential additional institutional investors and analysts. It's always great to hear from existing or potential shareholders and gather feedback on our results and growth trajectory.
Rick Mills: As always, this helps solidify our strategic plans, hones our messaging, and ultimately drives value for all our shareholders.
Rick Mills: With that said, we'll now move to the Q&A portion of the call. Please go ahead, operator.
Speaker Change: Thank you. As a reminder, if you would like to ask a question, please press star 1 1 on your telephone.
Speaker Change: You will then hear an automated message advising that your hand is raised.
Speaker Change: We also ask that you please wait for your name and company to be announced before you proceed with your question.
Speaker Change: And our first question for the day will be coming from Jason Kramer of Craig Kellum. Your line is open.
Speaker Change: Great. Thank you guys. Say, Rick, I want to talk more about your pipeline. Just curious if you're seeing any specific bottlenecking of the opportunities as they progress through the pipeline. Just wondering if these deals are maybe just slower to get to contract or is it an install issue or where along the continuum are you seeing things kind of slow down a little bit?
Speaker Change: Jason, good morning. Thanks for the question. It is certainly not in the install in any of those areas. It's really just been in the decision making as these companies have got more factors that they have now continued to evaluate.
Speaker Change: Most specifically, it's, okay, I've made a decision, I'm putting in digital signage, I'm putting it at all of my location, and how do my retail media network plans factor into that?
Speaker Change: Retail Media Networks was not a big play 2-3 years ago, today it is. And so there's an additional factor that they're looking at.
Speaker Change: as they make a decision. So we've seen nothing other than that.
So is it fair to characterize that like...
Speaker Change: maybe the size of the opportunities has the potential to expand, just given that the buyers are looking at not only just an install, like a digital signage install, but additional items that would layer in on top of that, creating potentially more of a pipeline on deals than you were seeing in the past?
Speaker Change: will increase the volume of the deployments on a per-customer basis.
generally speaking.
Speaker Change: Okay, thank you. I want to pivot over to Will. You've had a really nice uptick in profitability over the last couple of quarters and that's happened, you know, even in light of what we just talked about where some deals may not be coming in and the timing that you had expected. So, curious if you're thinking differently about the long-term profit in the model just given you're already hitting that that mid-teens even a margin on a lower base of revenue than expected.
William Logan: Yeah, great question Jason. I think that this quarter continues to show the operating leverage that this business has at scale.
William Logan: We've previously talked about 12% at $60 million, 15% at $80 million. The current quarter obviously shows some flexibility upward on that level, and we think that that's conservative.
William Logan: We're not yet fully prepared to say this is the new normal, and we would raise those expectations, but we certainly believe that this shows what is possible, and we'll be taking another hard look at it as we finalize the 2025 budget.
All right, great. Thank you, guys.
Speaker Change: Thanks Jason. Thank you. One moment for the next question please.
Speaker Change: And our next question will be coming from the line of Brian Kinsinger.
of Alliance Global Partners, your line is open.
Great. Thanks, guys. Nice results.
Speaker Change: You mentioned a robust pipeline, multiple large contracts to be consummated in the coming months and quarters.
Speaker Change: Is there a way to add more context besides the pipeline, number of contracts with whatever you define as large, and maybe which industries are strongest?
We have
Speaker Change: In the past, there's always been two or three big ones that we tend to work at any one time, Brian. I would tell you right now, our pipeline is fuller than it's ever been. I would tell you I've got five to 10 of them.
Speaker Change: So, we have not lost anything. We have some customers taking a little bit longer to make some decisions, but other than that, we are never more thrilled with the pipeline.
Speaker Change: Specific vertical areas, I would look at three of them. Number one, QSR. We continue to make strong inroads in QSR. A couple of very large ones.
and then
Speaker Change: Two or three regional in nature, you know, a regional in nature is four or five hundred locations. Of course, the nationals are all thousand plus.
So, see you have some strength there.
and Richard Mills. Thank you.
Speaker Change: Seeing strength in just retail in general, as everybody is evaluating a retail media network.
Speaker Change: And so those are probably the two verticals. Automotive, nothing specific.
Speaker Change: in that vertical, finance, nothing specific that we would talk about. The only other, the other vertical that is strong for us is convenient or CSTOR.
Speaker Change: and we see a couple of those continue to move forward. And then, last but not least, I would also talk about our IPTV, what we've called ... We've used the term sports and entertainment in the past. We've kind of re ...
Speaker Change: Put a new label on that internally that's our IPTV division led by Lee Summers
Speaker Change: we expect strong results in 2025 in that group. So those have been the verticals. Yeah. I'm glad you mentioned that because you mentioned.
Speaker Change: I think you use the word restructuring the IPTV business following that large upgrade.
Speaker Change: or structurally I usually think about things aren't going well you're adjusting the cost basis but then you follow that with you've got
Speaker Change: substantial opportunities. So maybe just reconcile those and then where are we in the upgrade cycle in terms of stadiums right now in your view?
Speaker Change: Yeah, restructure is probably not the best choice of the word, right? So actually, we've kind of allocated more resources to the IPT division. We've added some folks, added some staff to it.
Speaker Change: Last year we, you know, we did somewhere between three and six stadiums.
Speaker Change: from partial to full, okay? In 2025, we expect that number to double. Now, some are going to be partials, some are going to be full, but we expect that to, at minimum, double.
Speaker Change: That's number one. Number two, we are seeing a strong uptick in our adoption of the menu program within
Speaker Change: stadium venues. So even though I may not have the entire IPTV and control all of the displays, but they've got two or three hundred menu boards.
Speaker Change: and we're seeing strong adoption of CRI as the menu board vendor of choice across a number of stadiums.
Speaker Change: Great, that's super helpful. Thanks for those comments. Now in terms of the
Order delays, if you will.
Speaker Change: There are multiple going on it sounds like at the same time, so I want to make sure I understand Do you think it's because these are larger contracts, or do you think it's the head of the holiday season? It's hard to make those decisions right now. I guess I'm curious why you think there's multiple delays. I mean
It's not just one off customer.
Well, first off, I think...
Speaker Change: We've had a couple of customers who have gone through the entire cycle, right, and then
Speaker Change: ultimately decided, you know what, they really needed some more input as they put the entire project in front of their C store or C suite.
and so they really wanted to.
Speaker Change: take a look at some additional factors. We've had two customers involved in that now.
Speaker Change: So, we're still at the finish line, just haven't pushed them across.
Speaker Change: Yeah, Brian, I would add, yes, the scale matters. The size of these opportunities has grown and is significant.
Speaker Change: What Rick's talking about is independent RFP processes within perhaps the marketing or IT functions of a business, they get to the finish line. A couple of our examples, those things happened this summer. We thought we'd be moving to deployment in late in the year.
they ultimately then engaged third-party consulting firms.
Speaker Change: to evaluate and validate their choice because these are becoming more and more mission critical systems and protocols.
Speaker Change: We believe we're very well positioned in that third-party consultant world to continue to win these opportunities, but that's part of the slowdown is the process in large-scale opportunities has gotten longer.
Got it. Two more for me. You made your comments...
Speaker Change: quarterly on the building contract, which were helpful. The fourth quarter clearly is going to be a tad slower deployment than last quarter.
Speaker Change: I'm curious, has anything happened that gives you more or less confidence that we might see a steeper ramp in 2025 in deployments?
Speaker Change: There are a couple of, there have been some all-hands meetings. There are multiple vendors in that project as we've talked about historically. We have had, you know, some in-person all-hand meetings in the last quarter to help drive and identify efficiencies for that project.
Speaker Change: Ultimately, several of those need to happen on the software side of the program, which we cannot control, but there are things on the deployment side that we've provided our input, and certainly no one's more interested in helping them scale faster than CRI is.
Speaker Change: But ultimately, those are slightly outside of our control at the moment.
My last question, Will, for you.
William Logan: Your GNA, less depreciation and amortization, dropped significantly in the third quarter compared to the previous two quarters.
Speaker Change: What were the factors that drove this, and is this a new expense base that you'll start to grow up off of, or is it more one-time or non-recurring in nature?
Speaker Change: You have a few comments there, Brian. Thank you for the question. So, at the end of the second quarter, we did make a few changes.
Speaker Change: and personnel, more about reallocation of resources to areas that we think are the growth drivers for the business moving forward. So I would say there was some short-term third quarter reduction in expense that we are scaling back up here as we enter the fourth quarter to support the business in 2025.
Speaker Change: There's also probably about a quarter million dollars of expense that moved around in the P&L capitalization of software, expenses, and some items that moved into cost of goods that you don't see hitting gross margin as the SAS and services have expanded.
Speaker Change: So I do believe there will be a reduction that this is the right trend. We're not ready yet to say make third quarter the model going forward. As we get to the end of the year, we will reset that expectation for 2025 and certainly believe there's...
upside to retaining a reduced expense model moving forward.
Rick Mills: And Brian, this is Rick. I'd just add one more. Just general...
Rick Mills: statement, you're starting to see a flattening of our cost structure, again evident as to the leverage in this business.
If I, if I, you know, today the
Rick Mills: The organization is built, we're all on the new software, things are running reasonably well. We can always certainly fix this, that, or the other. But generally, we're very pleased about where we're at.
Rick Mills: and for us to significantly expand revenue, we don't see SG&A keeping pace with any rapid expansion of revenue.
Rick Mills: So we've we've talked about this for a number of years with even with you Brian, right? It's been three years coming to get to this leverage or four years and here we are
Thank you.
Great. Great execution over that time period, really. Thank you.
Speaker Change: Bye. Thanks Brian. Thank you. One moment for the next question.
Speaker Change: And our next question will be coming from the line of Howard Tauperin.
of Kaglec Brothers, your line is open.
Congratulations, guys. Great quarter.
Speaker Change: Good. Can I ask about how many screens and devices do you have under your control and how is that driving services and other revenue?
Speaker Change: Okay, we have hundreds of thousands, you know, today. The number that we have articulated to the market is approximately 400,000 screens, Howard.
and so...
most of those screens
SASS revenue on a monthly basis.
We have a couple older legacy contracts.
Speaker Change: One of those is a very large AV retailer across America where our software today runs their entire TV wall.
We estimate that at 75,000 devices alone.
but it is not generating one-to-one.
Speaker Change: that was a rooftop contract done with that customer years ago and we are in discussions
Speaker Change: with them as we speak, to transition them, they're one of the last, if not the last, to transition over to a traditional SAS one-to-one relationship.
Speaker Change: Does that help, Howard? Yes, yeah, and you're seeing, but are you seeing more activity from your customers coming to you to utilize those screens in terms of digital advertising and such?
Yeah, very much so.
Speaker Change: you know that's what we talk about retail media networks all the time. You know again for folks who are on the call
Speaker Change: You know, you look at all the great retailers in the world, right, and all the big box and, you know, these retailers that have thousands of locations all across the U.S.
Speaker Change: and they've done a great job at monetizing two of the three legs of their stool. Leg number one is they've monetized their website.
Speaker Change: We all know that. Everybody on this call has gone to a website and then that website has chased us for months, right? So they do a great job of monetizing the website. Number two, they do a great job of monetizing their mobile app. And we've all got lots of these retailer mobile apps loaded on our phone.
Speaker Change: Today as we move into 2025 they are all trying to figure out how do I monetize the third leg of the stool.
Speaker Change: What's the third leg of the stool? That's eyeballs. That's traffic in their physical locations.
Speaker Change: In order to do that, you need a number of screens.
Speaker Change: you know X amount of screens per square foot, if you will, to get proper viewing throughout a venue. So number of screens, we expect it to increase.
Number of locations, we expect it to increase significantly.
Speaker Change: and we have an ad tech software stack to address that problem for our retail customers.
Thank you. Bye.
Speaker Change: In terms of, you know, we talked about it, I guess, in the last quarter, a little bit of the international expansion into Mexico, South America, how is that proceeding, you know, what are the initial stages of that that you're seeing?
Speaker Change: Well, I'm proud to report we got our first PO from Mexico. It's a proof of concept for a large C-Store chain.
Speaker Change: Will Logan, I believe we're installing that the last half of November, maybe the first week of December. Is that directionally correct? Yeah, this quarter. So, already got our first proof of concept going in.
Speaker Change: We're talking to another customer that's got 400 Starbucks. We're talking to several opportunities throughout Mexico right now.
Rick Mills: Okay. And Howard, by the way, we did not expect that 2025 we're going to see significant revenue. We felt like to go into Mexico, our U.S. customers wanted us there, etc. We think that will bear fruit in the 2026 time frame.
Speaker Change: Okay, and talk a little bit more, you know, I know
Speaker Change: We had the loss earlier this year, but has the Channel Partner Program continued to bear fruit?
Speaker Change: Great question. Yes, it continues to bear fruit. Every month we add new licenses through our channel program.
I will certainly admit it is
Thanks, and keep up the great work, guys.
Thanks, Howard.
Thank you. One moment for the next question.
Speaker Change: And our next question will be coming from the line of John Heckman of Leidenberg-Salmon. Your line is open.
Oh, sorry.
Speaker Change: I was confused there for a minute. Can you hear me okay? I can, you're fine.
Speaker Change: Okay, so I'm trying to put some words in your mouth, but so you're saying that even if all of the
projects that you've identified that are on the bubble?
Speaker Change: don't go your way in Q4. You're still going to be up over 2023. Is that what you're saying?
No, Honor.
Are you talking?
Speaker Change: 2024 Q4 over 2023 Q4? Is that the question specifically, John? No, I thought it was like year-over-year, not quarter-over-quarter, just for the year. Because you said the year would be a record under any scenario.
Speaker Change: Yeah, John, what that means. Yeah, in any scenario, the full year 2024, we expect to be a record.
Speaker Change: The quarter over quarter, 4Q24 versus 4Q23, is where these material potential deployments could give us a challenge, but even in a scenario where those orders do not come in, the full year will be a record year over year.
Speaker Change: Okay, yeah, that's what I would say. And then could you elaborate on, besides the bowling center, is there a vertical? Is it the, you know, the retail sector? Is it the stadiums?
Is it the Q, you know, QRF?
Is that, is there any specific vertical where those...
Speaker Change: Yeah, I think I think as Rick mentioned briefly earlier with Brian
Speaker Change: QSR and Retail Media Networks are the two areas in particular in this period in the year.
Speaker Change: There's substantial momentum in IPTV and other areas as we move into 2025, but the opportunities that have been percolating through this year that are in or out for fourth quarter as we head into 2025 are primarily in that QSR retail media network environment.
Okay and my last question has to do with
your M&A.
Speaker Change: I guess appetite or target. You have been inquisitive in the past and are you still looking to do that or what's happening there?
Speaker Change: Okay, so I think he asked two things and the first one you mentioned appetite, right? I'm going to tell you our appetite is significant Particularly is if you look we we believe we've conquered our quote debt stack and we have our debt at the right leverage ratio
Speaker Change: to historical earnings, we're kind of under that one and a half, certainly under two, and we're now one and a half, right Will?
William Logan: Yeah, directionally. So we kind of feel like our cap stack is really starting to...
William Logan: come into shape, and we have potential dry powder should we choose to use it.
The challenge is
William Logan: Everybody else is so small, right? They're all 7 to 12 million. In the perfect world, we'd love to buy a 20-25 million dollar organization.
and they're just hard to find.
But I would tell you that we continue to talk.
and my guess is this year we've certainly...
had discussions with a dozen or so competitors.
William Logan: and some of them we no longer talk to, but some of them are at various conversation stages. Just nothing to announce today, but the appetite is strong.
Speaker Change: Okay. We'll welcome anything they add. I think that's correct. Okay.
Okay. Well, thank you. A nice quarter.
Thanks.
Come.
Speaker Change: Thank you. As a reminder, if you would like to ask a question, please press star 1.
One moment for the next question.
Speaker Change: And our next question comes from the line of John Roy of Watertower Researcher Line in Baltimore.
Speaker Change: Thank you and again congratulations like everyone else is saying on the quarter. So looking kind of maybe taking a step back just for a second and certainly the 20% growth is excellent.
Speaker Change: I was curious as to what you see are the major growth drivers over the next few years that kind of keep you hopefully going at a similar rate just kind of major buckets
Um...
Speaker Change: I currently see our same verticals continuing to grow. You know, we look at QSR.
We estimate today we believe QSR is approximately 30-35% penetrated.
Speaker Change: Okay, so there's tremendous white space to penetrate QSR. CSTOR, the argument is CSTOR is less penetrated, that CSTOR is under 25% penetrated.
So, tremendous opportunity in those two areas.
Speaker Change: We believe IPTV, the stadium and arena are getting a whole new look.
Speaker Change: as people, as dollars are translating into out-of-home exposure to folks, so every stadium and arena is a logical candidate.
Speaker Change: and generally speaking, all of them are interested in how can they upgrade and add their infrastructure.
So, and it's the reason we're investing highly in that.
Speaker Change: Fourth piece, we believe that IPTV over the next two to five years will convert to a SaaS-based screen business.
Speaker Change: instead of CapEx, that bodes well for us. So really a combination. And then fourth, I'd say the fourth one, is retail media networks.
You know, they're
they want to generate
Profitability
by adding retail media network to their
revenue mix. Every retailer wants to do that.
William Logan: Will Logan anything else to add? No, I think that appropriately captures where we think the growth will come from in 2025 and beyond.
Great, thanks so much.
Thank you.
Speaker Change: Thank you. I'm not showing any more questions in my queue and I would like to turn the call back over to William Logan. Please go ahead.
William Logan: Thank you. We did have one other question that came into our Investor Relations inbox during the call. It was with respect to recent news that Kustard was seeking to acquire 7-Eleven, who we have as a customer today, and whether we had any...
comment or...
William Logan: identification of what the impact to CRI might be in that transaction. I would say first our belief is that the transaction likely would not occur just because of
William Logan: We've seen 7-Eleven invoke a response within Japan about national security in the event of a pandemic and other items. We do have historical experience operating with Coustard. We previously operated as an installation partner for Circle K stores in the 2016 to 2018 timeframe. What we would say is Coustard operates very regionally, highly independent decision-making at the regional level. 7-Eleven is much more highly centralized.
William Logan: corporate decision-making and operating control. So certainly if there were a transaction, there could be an impact.
William Logan: But if it were to consummate, we really do not anticipate any material change in either relationship, and it may open up an opportunity for us to be a service provider on the other side of the house.
Speaker Change: There are no other questions from the IR inbox, so please let me conclude the call by thanking all of our shareholders, clients, partners, and employees for continuing their efforts and commitment and support as we work together to transform creative realities into the leading brand in digital signage solutions. We look forward to speaking with you again next quarter.
Thanks, folks.
Speaker Change: This concludes today's conference call. You may all disconnect. Have a great day.
Brian Kinstlinger, Howard Halpern, Cal Bartyzal