Q2 2026 GitLab Inc Earnings Call
Kassidy Fuller-Patterson: Over to Kassidy Fuller-Patterson.
Speaker #1: To Cassidy Fuller-Patterson.
Speaker #2: Good Good afternoon, we appreciate you joining us for Gitlab's second quarter fiscal year 2026 financial results conference call. With me are Bill Staples, our CEO, and Brian Robins, our CFO.
Moderator: Good afternoon. We appreciate you joining us for GitLab Inc.'s second quarter fiscal year 2026 financial results conference call. With me are Bill Staples, our CEO, and Brian Robbins, our CFO. During this afternoon's call, we will provide an overview of the business, commentary on our second quarter results, and guidance for the third quarter and fiscal year 2026. Before we begin, I'll cover the safe harbor statement. I'd like to direct you to the cautionary statement regarding forward-looking statements on page two of our presentation and in our earnings release issued earlier today, both of which are available under the investor relations section of our website. The presentation and earnings release include a discussion of certain risks, uncertainties, assumptions, and other factors that could cause our results to differ from those expressed in any forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act.
Speaker #2: During this afternoon's call, we will provide an overview of the business, commentary on our second-quarter results, and guidance for the third quarter and fiscal year 2026.
Speaker #2: Before we begin, I'll cover the safe harbor statement. I'd like to direct you to the cautionary statement regarding forward-looking statements on page 2 of our presentation, and on our earnings release issued earlier today.
Speaker #2: Both of which are available under the investor relations section of our website. The presentation and earnings release include a discussion of certain risks, uncertainties, assumptions, and other factors that could cause our results to differ from those expressed in any forward-looking statements within the meaning of the private securities litigation reform act.
Speaker #2: As is customary, the content of today's call and presentation will be governed by this language. In addition, during today's call, we will be discussing certain non-GAAP financial measures.
Moderator: As is customary, the content of today's call and presentation will be governed by this language. In addition, during today's call, we will be discussing certain non-GAAP financial measures. These non-GAAP financial measures exclude certain unusual or non-recurring items that management believes impact the comparability of the periods referenced. Please refer to the earnings release and presentation materials for additional information regarding these non-GAAP financial measures and the reconciliations to the most directly comparable GAAP measure. I will now turn the call over to Bill. Bill?
Speaker #2: These non-GAAP financial measures exclude certain unusual or non-recurring items that management believes impact the comparability of the periods referenced. Please refer to the earnings release and presentation materials for additional information regarding these non-GAAP financial measures and the reconciliations to the most directly comparable GAAP measure.
Speaker #2: I will now turn the call over to Bill. Bill?
Speaker #3: Thank you, Cassidy, and hello everyone. Thank you for joining us today. I'm pleased to report strong second quarter results, with revenue that increased 29% year over year, to $236 million, and non-GAAP operating margin reaching $17%.
Brian Robbins: Thank you, Kassidy, and hello, everyone. Thank you for joining us today. I'm pleased to report strong second quarter results with revenue that increased 29% year over year to $236 million and non-GAAP operating margin reaching 17%. Before we get into the broader business update, I want to call out that we're maintaining this year's revenue outlook while raising non-GAAP operating profit, demonstrating our commitment to responsible growth and operating discipline. This is to account for the ongoing go-to-market evolution under new leadership and an updated view on small business. We'll go into more detail shortly. As a reminder, we started our fiscal year with three objectives to help us focus on the things that we believe will help us drive our next leg of growth, with improved operational efficiency to continue to scale and become a generational company in our category. Here's an update.
Speaker #3: Before we get into the broader business update, I want to call out that we're maintaining this year's revenue outlook while raising non-GAAP operating profit, demonstrating our commitment to responsible growth and operating discipline.
Speaker #3: This is to account for the ongoing go-to-market evolution under new leadership, and an updated view on small business. We'll go into more detail shortly.
Speaker #3: As a reminder, we started our fiscal year with three objectives to help us focus on the things that we believe will help us drive our next leg of growth.
Speaker #3: With improved operational efficiency, to continue to scale and become a generational company in our category. Here's an update: our first objective is to add more new paying customers, especially in the mid-market and enterprise segments.
Brian Robbins: Our first objective is to add more new paying customers, especially in the mid-market and enterprise segments. To be a multi-billion dollar growth business, we need to add new customers every quarter who can grow with us. All cohorts, since the inception of the company, continue to expand with us at about the same rate, but new business cohort member sizes have been getting smaller. It's time to balance our expansion efforts with discrete motions focused on new customer acquisition. To achieve this, we're establishing two parallel tracks: sales-led growth and product-led growth. On the sales-led side, Ian Stewart, our CRO, just completed his first quarter and delivered strong results.
Speaker #3: To be a multi-billion dollar growth business, we need to add new customers every quarter who can grow with us. Our cohorts, since the inception of the company, continue to expand with us at about the same rate, but new business cohort member sizes have been getting smaller.
Speaker #3: It's time to balance our expansion efforts with discrete motions focused on new customer acquisition. To achieve this, we're establishing two parallel tracks: sales-led growth and product-led growth.
Speaker #3: On the sales-led side, Ian Stewart, our CRO, just completed his first quarter and delivered strong results. He is leading several strategic initiatives to help set us up for continued scale as we grow beyond the $1 billion revenue mark, including establishing a global new business team focused on first orders and a post-sales motion to support rapid module adoption and value realization.
Brian Robbins: He is leading several strategic initiatives to help set us up for continued scale as we grow beyond the billion-dollar revenue mark, including establishing a global new business team focused on first orders and a post-sales motion to support rapid module adoption and value realization. We'll ramp this initiative over H2 with the goal of starting to provide benefits for FY27. Our startup program has contributed to new customer growth this quarter with a 72% quarter-over-quarter increase in the number of new startups joining the program, of which 56% were AI companies. A powerful example of a new customer win is our Q2 deal with Chaos, a provider of world-class visualization and design solutions used across multiple industries, including architecture and design, media and entertainment, and product e-commerce.
Speaker #3: We'll ramp this initiative over H2, with the goal of starting to provide benefits for FY27. Our startup program has contributed to new customer growth this quarter, with a 72% quarter-over-quarter increase in the number of new startups joining the program, of which 56% were AI companies.
Speaker #3: A powerful example of a new customer win is our Q2 deal with Chaos, a provider of world-class visualization and design solutions used across multiple industries, including architecture and design, media and entertainment, and product e-commerce.
Speaker #3: In a highly competitive evaluation, Chaos selected Gitlab Ultimate for our end-to-end DevSecOps capabilities, including built-in security scanning and SOC 2 readiness, which are essential to Chaos's growth strategy following several recent acquisitions and mergers.
Brian Robbins: In a highly competitive evaluation, Chaos selected GitLab Ultimate for our end-to-end DevSecOps capabilities, including built-in security scanning and SOC 2 readiness, which are essential to Chaos's growth strategy following several recent acquisitions and mergers. On the product-led side, we will begin a growth motion focused on customer acquisition through self-service experience. I'm pleased to share that I've hired Manav Karatna as our new Chief Product and Marketing Officer. Manav and I worked together for four years at New Relic. He has held executive roles in product-led growth, marketing, and product management, and he's an expert in product-led growth. At New Relic, he built a large, high-growth self-service business from scratch that contributed nearly 50% of customers to the overall base in three years. I have confidence in Manav's ability to drive results at GitLab and expect this to gradually ramp over multiple quarters.
Speaker #3: On the product-led side, we will begin a growth motion focused on customer acquisition through self-service experience. I'm pleased to share that I've hired Manav Karatna as our new chief product and marketing officer.
Speaker #3: Manav and I worked together for four years at New Relic. He has held executive roles in product-led growth, marketing, and product management, and he's an expert in product-led growth.
Speaker #3: At New Relic, he built a large, high-growth self-service business from scratch that contributed nearly 50% of customers to the overall base in three years.
Speaker #3: I have confidence in Manav's ability to drive results at Gitlab, and expect this to gradually ramp over multiple quarters. Our second objective is to help customers realize the value of our platform faster, helping to drive revenue expansion.
Brian Robbins: Our second objective is to help customers realize the value of our platform faster, helping to drive revenue expansion. Here again, we're pursuing a dual sales-led growth and product-led growth strategy. On the sales-led side, we've strengthened our bench and are implementing multiple programs to reinforce sales and post-sales excellence. This includes better processes, sophistication around pipeline generation, and price control. We're also improving our training enablement efforts, particularly around AI, and we're developing new sales plays that will provide more focused outbound activities based on actions where we've previously seen results. This is all complemented by enhanced customer success and post-sales playbook designed to accelerate customer value realization and platform adoption. On the product-led side, our product-led growth motion will increasingly trigger product-qualified lead signals to our sales force. This will help them understand moments when our field can engage customers and better support their journey toward more value.
Speaker #3: Here again, we're pursuing a dual sales-led growth and product-led growth strategy. On the sales-led side, we've strengthened our bench and are implementing multiple programs to reinforce sales and post-sales excellence.
Speaker #3: This includes better processes, sophistication around pipeline generation, and price control. We're also improving our training enablement efforts, particularly around AI, and we're developing new sales plays that will provide more focused outbound activities based on actions where we've previously seen results.
Speaker #3: This is all complemented by enhanced customer success and post-sales playbook designed to accelerate customer value realization and platform adoption. On the product-led side, our product-led growth motion will increasingly trigger product-qualified lead signals to our sales force.
Speaker #3: This will help them understand moments when our field can engage customers and better support their journey toward more value. We had good success with expansions in Q2, with customers like Odesso, Clario, and Virgin Media O2.
Brian Robbins: We had good success with expansions in Q2 with customers like Odesso, Clario, and Virgin Media O2. For example, Virgin Media O2, one of the largest mobile network operators in the United Kingdom, has increased their Ultimate investment by more than five times since 2022 as they've embraced our comprehensive platform approach. Virgin Media O2 has become one of the most prolific adopters across source code management, CI/CD, and security scanning, and also recently enabled GitLab Ultimate with Duo. Our GitLab Ultimate and Dedicated products represent the highest value offers for purchase. GitLab Ultimate now represents 53% of our total ARR with eight of our 10 largest deals in the quarter, including Ultimate. Customers are increasingly recognizing our abilities in security and requiring that security be embedded with code development. The compelling security capabilities of the GitLab platform continue to be a strong driver of Ultimate adoption.
Speaker #3: For example, Virgin Media O2 is one of the largest mobile network operators in the United Kingdom, has increased their ultimate investment by more than five times since 2022, as they've embraced our comprehensive platform approach.
Speaker #3: Virgin Media O2 has become one of the most prolific adopters, across source code management, CI/CD, and security scanning. It also recently enabled GitLab Ultimate with Duo.
Speaker #3: Our GitLab Ultimate and dedicated products represent the highest value offers for purchase. GitLab Ultimate now represents 53% of our total ARR, with 8% of our 10 largest deals in the quarter, including Ultimate.
Speaker #3: Customers are increasingly recognizing our abilities in security and requiring that security be embedded with code development. The compelling security capabilities of the Gitlab platform continue to be a strong driver of ultimate adoption.
Speaker #3: Our new customer win with the major European fintech company is a great example. With Ultimate, they expect to reduce mean time to recovery from 2 to 4 days to 2 to 4 hours and achieve 100% security scanning across all projects.
Brian Robbins: Our new customer win with the major European fintech company is a great example. With Ultimate, they expect to reduce mean time to recovery from two to four days to two to four hours and achieve 100% security scanning across all projects. We also continue to see strong adoption of GitLab Dedicated, now contributing approximately $50 million in ARR, growing 92% year over year. Let me provide a couple of additional examples from the quarter of major customers and how they're realizing platform value. This quarter, we expanded our relationship with a top U.S. bank that upgraded to GitLab Dedicated after seeing success with GitLab Premium. They are also deploying 1,000 new seats of GitLab Duo Enterprise, enabling them to automate compliance enforcement and giving the power back to developers to innovate at the speed they need.
Speaker #3: We also continue to see strong adoption of Gitlab dedicated, now contributing approximately $50 million in ARR, growing 92% year over year. Let me provide a couple of additional examples from the quarter of major customers and how they're realizing platform value.
Speaker #3: This quarter, we expanded our relationship with a top U.S. bank that upgraded to GitLab Dedicated after seeing success with GitLab Premium. They are also deploying 1,000 new seats of GitLab Duo Enterprise, enabling them to automate compliance enforcement and giving the power back to developers to innovate at the speed they need.
Speaker #3: Another example is the Government Technology Agency of Singapore, which uses GitLab dedicated for its ShipPaths platform to support Singapore's digital government services. In Q2, GovTech Singapore expanded its deployment to include GitLab-managed hosted runners fully integrated with its dedicated instance.
Brian Robbins: Another example is the Government Technology Agency of Singapore, which uses GitLab Dedicated for its ShipHats platform that supports Singapore's digital government services. In Q2, GovTech Singapore expanded its deployment to include GitLab-managed hosted runners fully integrated with its dedicated instance. This will allow GovTech Singapore, through its ShipHats platform, to redirect technical expertise towards improving developer experience rather than maintaining infrastructure. Finally, our third objective is to accelerate customer-focused innovation by focusing in our core DevOps, security, and AI areas with an aim to provide higher quality, more complete market-leading solutions in all three areas. I'm excited at the accelerating pace of innovation that our teams are delivering. Some highlights of what we've delivered over the last few months include 28 new features in GitLab Premium, 33 new features in GitLab Ultimate, and 11 new features in GitLab Duo Pro and Enterprise.
Speaker #3: This will allow GovTech Singapore, through its ShipPaths platform, to redirect technical expertise towards improving developer experience The rather than maintaining infrastructure. Finally, our third objective is to accelerate customer-focused innovation by focusing in our core DevOps security and AI areas, with a aim to provide higher quality, more complete market-leading solutions in all three areas.
Speaker #3: I'm excited at the accelerating pace of innovation that our teams are delivering. Some highlights of what we've delivered over the last few months include 28 new features in GitLab Premium, 33 new features in GitLab Ultimate, and 11 new features in GitLab Duo Pro and Enterprise.
Speaker #3: That's a total of 72 new features across our paid tiers and offerings. For example, in core DevOps, we're simplifying dependency management with our Maven Virtual Registry, now in beta for GitLab Premium and Ultimate customers.
Brian Robbins: That's a total of 72 new features across our paid tiers and offerings. For example, in core DevOps, we're simplifying dependency management with our Maven virtual registry now in beta for GitLab Premium and GitLab Ultimate customers. We also released GitLab Runner 18.1, a cornerstone feature of GitLab CI/CD pipelines, which we continue to enhance and invest in. We've added immutable container tags, a new merge request homepage, and custom workflow statuses for issues and tasks. These features extend GitLab's competitive advantage over the best-of-breed solutions. In security and compliance, we continue to strengthen our capabilities. Today, customers can now use GitLab's new CI/CD components to support SLSA level 1 compliance. We've also added PHP support for advanced SAST, increased SAST coverage for GitLab Duo vulnerability resolution, a new group overview compliance dashboard, and the beta of centralized security policy management.
Speaker #3: We also released GitLab Runner 18.1, a cornerstone feature of GitLab CI/CD pipelines. Additionally, we've added immutable container tags, a new merge request homepage, and custom workflow statuses for issues and tasks.
Speaker #3: These features extend GitLab's competitive advantage over the best-of-breed solutions. In security and compliance, we continue to strengthen our capabilities. Today, customers can now use GitLab's new CI/CD components to support SLSA Level 1 compliance. We've also added PHP support, for which we continue to enhance and invest in advanced SAST, increased SAST coverage for GitLab Duo vulnerability resolution, a new group overview compliance dashboard, and the beta of centralized security policy management.
Speaker #3: And we rolled out compromised password protection to 100% of GitLab.com users, which helps protect all user accounts from credential-based attacks. Our innovation to embed security seamlessly within development is a key driver for why large customers continue to expand with us.
Brian Robbins: We rolled out compromised password protection to 100% of GitLab.com users, which helps protect all user accounts from credential-based attacks. Our innovation to embed security seamlessly within development is a key driver for why large customers continue to expand with us. For example, one of the largest wireless operators in the U.S. is using the security policies in GitLab Ultimate to implement comprehensive shift-left practices that automate security scanning, enforce guardrails across their CI/CD pipelines, and require merge approvals tied to scan results, all without slowing down innovation. In Q2, they expanded their GitLab Ultimate deployment by adding 4,000 new users as part of their initiative to standardize on GitLab as the organization's primary software development platform for all engineering teams. Customers are really excited by the rapid development and promise of AI tools. GitLab customers are actively testing multiple tools and developing their internal use strategies.
Speaker #3: For example, one of the largest wireless operators in the U.S. is using the security policies in GitLab Ultimate to implement comprehensive shift-left practices that automate security scanning, enforce guardrails across their CI/CD pipelines, and require merge approvals tied to scan results, all without slowing down innovation.
Speaker #3: In Q2, they expanded their GitLab Ultimate deployment by adding 4,000 new users as part of their initiative to standardize on GitLab as the organization's primary software development platform for all engineering teams.
Speaker #3: Customers are really excited by the rapid development and promise of AI tools. GitLab customers are actively testing multiple tools and developing their internal use strategies.
Speaker #3: GitLab's Duo Agent platform is resonating with customers who see immediate value in our agentic AI capabilities. As one senior software architect at a leading communications industry supplier put it, "I've been impressed watching GitLab's agentic AI capabilities evolve with the new Duo Agent platform."
Brian Robbins: GitLab Duo Agent platform is resonating with customers who see immediate value in our agentic AI capabilities. As one Senior Software Architect at a leading communications industry supplier put it, "I've been impressed watching GitLab's agentic AI capabilities evolve with the new Duo Agent platform." The autonomous task delegation and run tools functionality are genuinely useful additions to our workflow. Our expansion with Emirates, the world's largest international airline, demonstrates the competitive advantage of our integrated AI approach with GitLab Duo Enterprise. After comparing Duo with other solutions, including GitHub Copilot, Emirates decided to go all in with GitLab, renewing their investment and upgrading to Duo Enterprise. We're also seeing traction with our GitLab Duo with Amazon Q offering. Our AWS partnership delivered a significant milestone this quarter with HFM, a global retail broker serving over 2.5 million client accounts.
Speaker #3: The autonomous task delegation and run tools functionality are genuinely useful additions to our workflow. Our expansion with Emirates, the world's largest international airline, demonstrates the competitive advantage of our integrated AI approach with GitLab Duo Enterprise.
Speaker #3: After comparing Duo with other solutions, including GitHub Copilot, Emirates decided to go all in with GitLab, renewing their investment and upgrading to Duo Enterprise.
Speaker #3: We're also seeing traction with our Gitlab Duo with Amazon Q offering. Our AWS partnership delivered a significant milestone this quarter with HFM, a global retail broker serving over 2.5 million client accounts.
Speaker #3: Originally a GitLab Community Edition user, HFM was looking to replace point solutions such as Jenkins with GitLab. At the same time, they were actively evaluating AI code generation tools such as Amazon Q Developer Gemini and GitHub Copilot.
Brian Robbins: Originally, a GitLab Community Edition user, HFM was looking to replace point solutions such as Jenkins with GitLab. At the same time, they were actively evaluating AI code generation tools such as Amazon Q Developer, Gemini, and GitHub Copilot. Our GitLab Duo with Amazon Q offering was a natural choice since it allows HFM to leverage Amazon Q agents where their developers are already working in GitLab's DevSecOps platform. Now I want to address three common questions I've been hearing from investors recently regarding the impacts of AI and our strategy. First, we've received questions about the balance of our growth between pricing and seat growth. I'm pleased to share that seat growth has accounted for more than 70% of our revenue growth, and in fact, we've seen accelerating double-digit paid seat growth rates over the past year. Every customer cohort since inception continues to expand with us.
Speaker #3: Our GitLab Duo with Amazon Q offering was a natural choice, since it allows HFM to leverage Amazon Q agents where their developers are already working in GitLab's DevSecOps platform.
Speaker #3: Now I want to address three common questions I've been hearing from investors recently regarding the impacts of AI and our strategy. First, we've received questions about the balance of our growth between pricing and seat growth.
Speaker #3: I'm pleased to share that seat growth has accounted for more than 70% of our revenue growth, and in fact, we've seen accelerating double-digit paid seat growth rates over the past year.
Speaker #3: Every customer cohort since inception continues to expand with us. We've shared this one-time metric to help you understand the trends that we're seeing in the business.
Brian Robbins: We've shared this one-time metric to help you understand the trends that we're seeing in the business. The second question is how AI will impact seat growth and monetization. There are some who assume that AI will reduce engineering headcount and impact our seat growth. During the quarter, we conducted a third-party survey of nearly 400 customers to better understand the impact of AI on their use of GitLab. 91% of customers we surveyed believe AI-native dev tools will increase their use of GitLab within the next 24 months. 88% expect their developer headcount to increase or stay the same within the next 12 months, and 78% of those expect it to increase. GitLab's monetization opportunity doesn't end with seat growth.
Speaker #3: The second question is how AI will impact seat growth and monetization. There are some who assume that AI will reduce engineering headcount and impact our seat growth.
Speaker #3: During the quarter, we conducted a third-party survey of nearly 400 customers to better understand the impact of AI on their use of GitLab. Ninety-one percent of customers we surveyed believe AI-native dev tools will increase their use of GitLab within the next 24 months. Eighty-eight percent expect their developer headcount to increase or stay the same within the next 12 months, and seventy-eight percent of those expect it to increase.
Speaker #3: Gitlab's monetization opportunity doesn't end with seat growth. With the Duo agent platform, we are enabling engineers to collaborate with AI agents and do many tasks automatically and in parallel, instead of manually or one at a time as they do today.
Brian Robbins: With the Duo Agent platform, we are enabling engineers to collaborate with AI agents and do many tasks automatically and in parallel instead of manually or one at a time as they do today. We plan to charge for all of this work done via usage charges, whether that work is done by our agents or our partners' agents hosted and integrated into our platform. This means our business model will evolve from a purely seat-based model to a hybrid seat plus usage-based model. When launched, customers will receive some included usage with their base subscriptions so they can easily begin to adopt the Duo Agent platform, pay as they go beyond the included amount, and commit in advance to additional usage to receive the very best pricing. Finally, I'd like to expand on the competitive environment.
Speaker #3: We plan to charge for all of this work done via usage charges, whether that work is done by our agents or our partners' agents hosted and integrated into our platform.
Speaker #3: This means our business model will evolve, from a purely seat-based model to a hybrid seat plus usage-based model. When launched, customers will receive some included usage, with their base subscriptions, so they can easily begin to adopt Duo agent platform, pay as they go beyond the included amount, and commit in advance to additional usage to receive the very best pricing.
Speaker #3: Finally, I'd like to expand on the competitive environment. It seems that with each passing month, there's a new startup or large vendor shipping AI code generation tools.
Brian Robbins: It seems with each passing month, there's a new startup or large new vendor shipping AI code generation tools. With GitLab Duo Agent platform, we're positioning ourselves differently from code generation-focused AI tools. Multiple independent studies have highlighted significant issues related to the current generation of coding assistants. This quarter, there were multiple reports that show the code these tools generate isn't always high quality or secure, and research has shown that almost right code isn't having the positive effect on developer productivity that organizations had hoped for. These are the same challenges human engineers already have and the mission GitLab was built around. As an AI-native DevSecOps orchestration platform, we welcome engineers and AI code generation tools with open arms. Our platform helps engineers and AI agents and tools they choose to build, verify, secure, and deploy enterprise-grade software that meets the world's toughest privacy, security, and compliance standards.
Speaker #3: With Gitlab Duo agent platform, we're positioning ourselves differently from code generation-focused AI tools. Multiple independent studies have highlighted significant issues related to the current generation of coding assistants.
Speaker #3: This quarter, there were multiple reports that show the code these tools generate isn't always high quality or secure, and research has shown that almost-right code isn't having the positive effects on developer productivity that organizations had hoped for.
Speaker #3: These are the same challenges human engineers already have, and the mission GitLab was built around. As an AI-native DevSecOps orchestration platform, we welcome engineers and AI code generation tools with open arms.
Speaker #3: Our platform helps engineers and AI agents and tools they choose to build, verify, secure, and deploy enterprise-grade software that meets the world's toughest privacy, security, and compliance standards.
Speaker #3: If you're running a business, and you want to embrace AI as part of your engineering process, we believe you need Gitlab. This is why just a few weeks ago with Gitlab 18.3, we announced agentic partnerships with Anthropic, OpenAI, Google, Amazon, and Cursor, and shipped native integrations with Cloud Code, Codex, Amazon Q, Gemini CLI, and open-source agents.
Brian Robbins: If you're running a business and you want to embrace AI as part of your engineering process, we believe you need GitLab. This is why, just a few weeks ago with GitLab 18.3, we announced agentic partnerships with Anthropic, OpenAI, Google, Amazon, and Cursor, and shipped native integrations with Cloud Code, Codex, Amazon Q, Gemini CLI, and open source agents. We also delivered our first model context protocol server with partnership support from Cursor. We see these strategic partnerships as a strong affirmation of the value of our platform. True to our roots, we are the only vendor to provide this level of interoperability. GitLab Duo weekly active usage has increased nearly 6x so far this year, albeit off a small base.
Speaker #3: We also delivered our first model context protocol server with partnership support from Cursor. We see these strategic partnerships as a strong affirmation of the value of our platform.
Speaker #3: True to our roots, we are the only vendor to provide this level of interoperability. GitLab Duo's weekly active usage has increased nearly 6x so far this year, albeit off a small base.
Speaker #3: One quarter of this usage, our new Duo users on the capabilities included in Premium and Ultimate, announced with 18.0. These users now have access to the Duo agent platform in beta.
Brian Robbins: One quarter of this usage are new Duo users on the capabilities included in Premium and Ultimate, announced with 18.0, and these users now have access to Duo Agent platform in beta. We're on track for Duo Agent platform general availability by the end of this year. This is a very bold and ambitious target, and I want to set proper expectations. We'll ship when we reach our quality bar, and customers are ready to pay for the service. In addition, it is important to remember that adoption of an on-premises software like GitLab can take time. Approximately 70% of our revenue is from self-managed deployments, and customers often take many quarters, sometimes years, to upgrade. Our flexible deployment options and vibrant partner ecosystem is part of what makes GitLab unique. As a public company not controlled by a single cloud hyperscaler, GitLab stands for independence.
Speaker #3: We're on track for the Duo agent platform GA by the end of this year. This is a very bold and ambitious target, and I want to set proper expectations.
Speaker #3: We'll ship when we reach our quality bar and customers are ready to pay for the service. In addition, it is important to remember that adoption of an on-premises software like GitLab can take time. Approximately 70% of our revenue is from self-managed deployments, and customers often take many quarters, sometimes years, to upgrade.
Speaker #3: Our flexible deployment options and vibrant partner ecosystem are part of what makes GitLab unique. As a public company, not controlled by a single cloud hyperscaler, GitLab stands for independence.
Speaker #3: The independence of our customers to build software in the cloud of choice, with their choice of AI providers, and using their choice of AI code generation tools.
Brian Robbins: The independence of our customers to build software in the cloud of choice and with their choice of AI providers and using their choice of AI code generation tools. We stand alone in that promise. The world needs GitLab today more than ever. To close, I want to address the leadership news we announced this afternoon. By now, you all should have seen the news that Brian Robbins will step down as Chief Financial Officer to pursue another opportunity. He'll stay with us until September 19th to help ensure a smooth transition. On behalf of the entire company, I want to thank you, Brian, for your many contributions and wish you all the best. We've initiated a search for a successor and are fortunate to have a deep bench of talent throughout our finance organization during this period.
Speaker #3: We stand alone in that promise. The world needs GitLab today more than ever. To close, I want to address the leadership news we announced this afternoon.
Speaker #3: By now, you all should have seen the news that Brian Robins will step down as Chief Financial Officer to pursue another opportunity. He'll stay with us until September 19th to help ensure a smooth transition. On behalf of the entire company, I want to thank you, Brian, for your many contributions and wish you all the best.
Speaker #3: We've initiated a search for a successor and are fortunate to have a deep bench of talent throughout our finance organization during this period. We expect to name James Shen, Vice President of Finance, as Interim CFO and to promote Controller Simon Mundy as Chief Accounting Officer.
Brian Robbins: We expect to name James Shen, Vice President of Finance, as Interim CFO, and to promote Controller Simon Mundy as Chief Accounting Officer. James has been with us since 2021 and has played an integral role in shaping our business strategy and financial principles. We're confident this will be a seamless handoff. I'm really excited by the fresh energy and new perspectives from new team members, which will complement the experience and strength of our existing team. I feel confident in the health of the business, our competitive position in the market, and the increasing strength of our AI strategy. I'll keep you updated as we progress each quarter. With that, I'll turn it over to Brian. Thank you, Bill. It's been a life-changing opportunity and a real privilege to be able to contribute to GitLab Inc.'s success and growth in this chapter of my career.
Speaker #3: James has been with us since 2021 and has played an integral role in shaping our business strategy and financial principles. We're confident this will be a seamless handoff.
Speaker #3: I'm really excited by the fresh energy and new perspectives from new team members, which will complement the experience and strength of our existing team.
Speaker #3: I feel confident in the health of the business, our competitive position in the market, and the increasing strength of our AI strategy. I'll keep you updated as we progress each quarter, with that, I'll turn it over to Brian.
Speaker #4: Thank you, Bill. It's been a life-changing opportunity and a real privilege to be able to contribute to GitLab's success and growth in this chapter of my career.
Speaker #4: I want to thank the entire GitLab team and the board for their partnership throughout my tenure, and for letting me be part of this journey.
Brian Robbins: I want to thank the entire GitLab Inc. team and the board for their partnership throughout my tenure and letting me be part of this journey. Sid and Bill, thank you for your support and trust you've placed in me as a partner. We built a category-defining leader and architect of the company for global scale with improving margins and free cash flow generation. The world needs GitLab Inc. today more than ever. I'm confident in GitLab Inc.'s future and look forward to tracking our continued success for decades to come. Now let's turn to the results. I'm pleased with our second quarter results, which resulted in 29% revenue growth and significant year-over-year operating margin expansion. Our continued growth underscores the incredible value customers realize with our AI-native DevSecOps platform. Second quarter revenue reached $236 million, an increase of 29% from Q2 of the prior year.
Speaker #4: Sid and Bill, thank you for your support and the trust you've placed in me as a partner. We built a category-defining leader in the architecture of the company for global scale, with improving margins and free cash flow generation.
Speaker #4: The world needs GitLab today more than ever. I'm confident in GitLab's future and look forward to tracking our continued success for decades to come.
Speaker #4: Now, let's turn to the results. I'm pleased with our second quarter results, which result in 29% revenue growth and significant year-over-year operating margin expansion.
Speaker #4: Our continued growth underscores the incredible value customers realize with our AI-native DevSecOps platform. Second quarter revenue reached $236 million, an increase of 29% from Q2 of the prior year.
Speaker #4: We now have 10,338 customers with ARR of at least $5,000, which contributed over 95% of total ARR in Q2. Our larger customer cohort of 100,000, plus an ARR, increased 25% year-over-year and reached $1,344.
Brian Robbins: We now have 10,338 customers with ARR of at least $5,000, which contributed over 95% of total ARR in Q2. Our larger customer cohort of $100,000 plus in ARR increased 25% year over year and reached 1,344. We continue to have a diversified customer base, both by industry and geography, and no single customer accounts for more than 2% of ARR. On the expansion front, we ended the quarter with a dollar-based net retention rate or DBNRR of 121%. Q2 DBNRR was driven by a combination of seat expansion at approximately 80%, increased customer yield at approximately 5%, and a balance due to tier upgrades. I'd like to reiterate some of the one-time disclosures on seats that Bill discussed. Over 70% of our revenue growth in FY26 is due to paid seat growth, and over the last four quarters, we've seen an accelerating double-digit rate of paid seat year-over-year growth.
Speaker #4: We continue to have a diversified customer base both by industry and geography, and no single customer accounts for more than 2% of ARR. On the expansion front, we ended the quarter with a dollar-based net retention rate, or DBNRR, of 121%.
Speaker #4: Q2 DBNRR was driven by a combination of seat expansion at approximately 80%, increased customer yield at approximately 5%, and a balance due to tier upgrades.
Speaker #4: I'd like to reiterate some of the one-time disclosures on seats that Bill discussed. Over 70% of our revenue growth in FY26 is due to paid seat growth, and over the last four quarters, we've seen an accelerating double-digit rate of paid seat year-over-year growth.
Speaker #4: Less than 10% of the FY26 revenue growth was derived from the premium price increase. I'd like to take a moment to discuss the power of our business model.
Brian Robbins: Less than 10% of the FY26 revenue growth was derived from the premium price increase. I'd like to take a moment to discuss the power of our business model. Our customer retention metrics continue to reflect the strength and durability of our platform value proposition. We maintain consistently strong net dollar retention rates across our customer cohorts. Most importantly, our historical customer cohorts continue to expand, speaking to the value of the proposition of our platform even in challenging environments. Our 2016 cohort, now nearly a decade old, showcases this trend, growing 103.6 times in ARR since its inception. This continued expansion from one of our oldest cohorts demonstrates the power of our land and expand model, validating that our customers continue to derive value from our AI-native platform long after initial deployment.
Speaker #4: Our customer retention metrics continue to reflect the strength and durability of our platform value proposition. We maintain consistently strong net dollar retention rates across our customer cohorts.
Speaker #4: Most importantly, our historical customer cohorts continue to expand, speaking to the value of the proposition of our platform even in challenging environments. Our 2016 cohort, now nearly a decade old, showcases this trend, growing 103.6 times in ARR since its inception.
Speaker #4: This continued expansion from one of our oldest cohorts demonstrates the power of our land and expand model, validating that our customers continue to derive value from our AI-native platform long after initial deployment.
Speaker #4: Total RPO grew 32% year-over-year to $988.2 million, while CRPO grew 31% year-over-year to $621.6 million. We encourage investors to look at these numbers over a multi-quarter period.
Brian Robbins: Total RPO grew 32% year over year to $988.2 million, while CRPO grew 31% year over year to $621.6 million. We encourage investors to look at these numbers over a multi-quarter period. Non-GAAP gross margin was 90% for the quarter. The team continues to do a good job of driving operating efficiencies to maintain our best-in-class gross margin, even as our SaaS business has quickly scaled, driven in part by the strength of GitLab Dedicated. SaaS now represents approximately 30% of the total revenue and grew 39% year over year. Once again, we saw a significant increase in operating leverage. Q2 non-GAAP operating income was $39.6 million compared to $18.2 million in Q2 of last year. Non-GAAP operating margin was 16.8% compared to 10% in Q2 of last year, an increase of approximately 682 basis points year over year.
Speaker #4: Non-GAAP gross margin was 90% for the quarter. The team continues to do a good job of driving operating efficiencies to maintain our best-in-class gross margin, even as our SaaS business is quickly scaled.
Speaker #4: Driven in part by the strength of GitLab Dedicated, SaaS now represents approximately 30% of the total revenue and grew 39% year-over-year. Once again, we saw a significant increase in operating leverage.
Speaker #4: Q2 non-GAAP operating income was $39.6 million, compared to $18.2 million in Q2 of last year. Non-GAAP operating margin was 16.8% compared to 10% in Q2 of last year, an increase of approximately 682 basis points year-over-year.
Speaker #4: We believe we have a very strong business model that gives us the flexibility to continue to invest in the business and expand operating margins.
Brian Robbins: We believe we have a very strong business model that gives us the flexibility to continue to invest in the business and expand operating margins. Q2 FY26 adjusted free cash flow was $46 million, with adjusted free cash flow margins of 20% compared to $10.8 million in the prior year. We ended the quarter with $1.2 billion in cash and investments, providing us with significant flexibility to navigate market fluctuations while continuing to invest in both our AI capabilities, platform enhancements, and go-to-market organization. Separately, I'd like to provide an update on Jihu, our China joint venture. In Q2 FY26, non-GAAP expenses related to Jihu were $3.3 million compared to $3.3 million in Q2 of last year. Our goal remains to deconsolidate Jihu; however, we cannot predict the likelihood or timing of when this may potentially occur.
Speaker #4: Q2 FY26 adjusted free cash flow is $46 million, with adjusted free cash flow margins of 20%. This compares to $10.8 million in the prior year.
Speaker #4: We ended the quarter with $1.2 billion in cash and investments, providing us with significant flexibility to navigate market fluctuations while continuing to invest in both our AI capabilities, platform enhancements, and go-to-market organization.
Speaker #4: Separately, I'd like to provide an update on GHU, our China joint venture. In Q2 FY26, non-GAAP expenses related to GHU were $3.3 million, compared to $3.3 million in Q2 of last year.
Speaker #4: Our goal remains to deconsolidate GHU; however, we cannot predict the likelihood or timing of when this may potentially occur. Thus, for FY26 modeling purposes, we forecast approximately $18 million of expenses related to GHU, compared with $13 million from last year.
Brian Robbins: Thus, for FY26 modeling purposes, we forecast approximately $18 million of expenses related to Jihu compared with $13 million from last year. Now turning to guidance. For the third quarter of FY26, we expect total revenue of $238 million to $239 million, representing a growth rate of approximately 23% year over year. We expect non-GAAP operating income of $31 million to $32 million, and we expect a non-GAAP net income per share of $0.19 to $0.20, assuming 171 million weighted average diluted shares outstanding. For the full year of FY26, we expect total revenue of $936 million to $942 million, representing a growth rate of approximately 24% year over year. We expect a non-GAAP operating income of $133 million to $136 million, and we expect a non-GAAP net income per share of $0.82 to $0.83, assuming 171 million weighted average diluted shares outstanding.
Speaker #4: Now, turning to guidance. For the third quarter of FY26, we expect total revenue of $238 million to $239 million, representing a growth rate of approximately 23% year-over-year.
Speaker #4: We expect non-GAAP operating income of $31 million to $32 million, and we expect a non-GAAP net income per share of $0.19 to $0.20, assuming a $171 million weighted average diluted shares outstanding.
Speaker #4: For the full year of FY26, we expect total revenue of $936 million to $942 million, representing a growth rate of approximately 24% year-over-year. We expect a non-GAAP operating income of $133 million to $136 million, and we expect a non-GAAP net income per share of $0.82 to $0.83, assuming a $171 million weighted average diluted shares outstanding.
Speaker #4: We're maintaining our full-year revenue guidance at the present time to account for the go-to-market organizational changes we're implementing that Bill discussed earlier. We see these changes as foundational for the company and expect they will position us for strong future performance.
Brian Robbins: We're maintaining our full-year revenue guidance at the present time to account for the go-to-market organizational changes we're implementing that Bill discussed earlier. We see these changes as foundational for the company and expect they will position us for strong future performance. Additionally, we are seeing incremental softness in SMB that we expect will persist through the rest of this year. While GitLab continues to benefit from consolidation versus point solutions, budget pressures as a whole are weighing on this segment. Against this, we have raised our full-year profit outlook, reflecting strong operating leverage in the business and a commitment to responsible, sustainable growth. In summary, I'm pleased with our second quarter results. GitLab stands uniquely positioned as the only cloud-agnostic, model-neutral DevSecOps platform with comprehensive contextual AI capabilities that span planning through deployment, capable of running anywhere, including air-gapped environments.
Speaker #4: Additionally, we're seeing an incremental softness in S&B that we expect will persist through the rest of this year. While GitLab continues to benefit from consolidation versus point solutions, budget pressures as a whole are weighing on this segment.
Speaker #4: Against this, we have raised our full-year profit outlook, reflecting strong operating leverage in the business and a commitment to responsible, sustainable growth. In summary, I'm pleased with our second-quarter results.
Speaker #4: GitLab stands uniquely positioned as the only cloud-agnostic, model-neutral DevSecOps platform with comprehensive contextual AI capabilities that span planning through deployment. Capable of running anywhere, including air-gapped environments.
Speaker #4: Our TAM continues to grow, and we are investing strategically against opportunities that we expect will drive long-term value. We are delivering sustainable growth while enhancing profitability and free cash flow.
Brian Robbins: Our TAM continues to grow, and we are investing strategically against opportunities that we expect will drive long-term value. We are delivering sustainable growth while enhancing profitability and free cash flow. We're positioning GitLab for long-term success regardless of market conditions. With that, I'll turn the call to Rick Cassidy, who will moderate the Q&A.
Speaker #4: We're positioning GitLab for long-term success, regardless of market conditions. With that, I'll turn the call over to Cassidy, who will moderate the Q&A.
Speaker #5: Hi all, at this time, if you would like to ask a question, please use the raise hand function located on your Zoom toolbar. If you joined via phone, you may press *9.
Moderator: Hi all. At this time, if you would like to ask a question, please use the raise hand function located on your Zoom toolbar, or if you joined via phone, you may press star 9. We do request that you limit yourself to one question. We'll take our first question from Rob Owens with Piper Sandler. Our following question will be from Matt Hedberg with RBC. Rob?
Speaker #5: We do request that you limit yourself to one question. We'll take our first question from Rob Owens with Piper Sandler. Our following question will be from Matt Hedberg with RBC.
Speaker #5: Rob?
Speaker #3: Great, thank you for taking the question. I guess given I only have one, I will annoy Brian with a two-parter here. And congrats, Brian.
Rob Owens: Great. Thank you for taking the question. I guess given I only have one, I will annoy Brian with a two-parter here, and congrats, Brian. Bill, on the first part of the question, obviously, since you joined about nine months ago, a lot of executive turnover. Maybe just help us get comfort directionally with what's changing, what's not changing in your view, because from a product development, go-to-market standpoint, and a financial standpoint now, I guess you have new chiefs across all those different divisions. Brian, for you, I appreciate some of the conservatism relative to the go-to-market organizational changes and incremental softness in SMB, but if I look at the first half versus the second half, just from a growth perspective, you saw about 28% growth in the first half and only 21% forecast in the second half.
Speaker #3: Bill, on the first part of the question, obviously since you joined about nine months ago, a lot of executive turnover maybe just help us get comfort directionally with what's changing, what's not changing in your view, because from a product development, go-to-market standpoint, and a financial standpoint now, I guess you have new chiefs across all those different divisions.
Speaker #3: And then, Brian, for you, I appreciate some of the conservatism relative to the go-to-market organizational changes and incremental softness in SMB. But if I look at the first half versus the second half, just from a growth perspective, you saw about 28% growth in the first half and only 21% forecast in the second half.
Speaker #3: So, is there incremental conservatism that we should think is built into the second half around these factors, or is it the same amount of conservatism with, I guess, the reality of what you're seeing in SMB?
Rob Owens: Is there incremental conservatism that we should think that's built into the second half around these factors or the same amount of conservatism with, I guess, the reality of what you're seeing in SMB? Thanks for taking those, guys.
Speaker #3: Thanks for taking those, guys.
Speaker #6: Thanks, Rob, for the question. I'll take the first part around the management changes. I'm really grateful for the many team members who've helped make GitLab the company it is today, including Brian.
Bill Staples: Thanks, Rob, for the question. I'll take the first part around the management changes. I'm really grateful for the many team members who've helped make GitLab Inc. the company it is today, including Brian. I'm here to bring stability and scale to GitLab Inc., and the combination of new executives that we've brought in and the experienced team members that are here creates a really exciting and dynamic environment that I believe will help us scale. The AI cycle represents both a tremendous opportunity and a risk if we don't capitalize on it. As we see our first billion in revenue coming into sight, scaling to our second billion and beyond is really our focus, and I'm excited about the road ahead.
Speaker #6: You know, I'm here to bring stability and scale to GitLab, and the combination of new executives that we've brought in and the experienced team members that are here creates a really exciting and dynamic environment that I believe will help us scale.
Speaker #6: The AI cycle represents both a tremendous opportunity and a risk if we don't capitalize on it. So as we see our first billion in revenue coming into sight, scaling to our second billion and beyond is really our focus.
Speaker #6: And I'm excited about the road ahead.
Speaker #4: Yeah, thanks, Bill. And Rob, let me just touch on guidance for a little bit. You know, for Q2, we're pleased with execution on the financial results and the metrics across the board.
Matt Hedberg: Yeah, thanks, Bill. Rob, let me just touch on guidance for a little bit. You know, for Q2, we're pleased with the execution on the financial results and the metrics across the board. We did have some outperformance related to linearity, and we had the strongest first month of bookings that we had in the last two years in this quarter. Over 20% was booked in month one. We also had the mix of SaaS versus self-managed was the opposite of Q1, so we got more recognition in the quarter for that as well. You know, we raised profitability for the year, and Bill's prepared remarks talk about some of the changes that Ian's making in go-to-market after he's been here one quarter. Just to be prudent, as we sort of set the foundation up for next year, we held guidance at the same for the full year.
Speaker #4: We did have some outperformance related to linearity, and so we had the strongest first month of bookings than we had in the last two years in this quarter, over 20% with booked in month one.
Speaker #4: And then we also, the mix of SaaS versus self-managed was the opposite of one queue. So we got, you know, more recognition in the quarter for that as well.
Speaker #4: You know, we raised profitability for the year. And Bill's prepared remarks, he talked about some of the changes that Ian's making in go-to-market after he's been here one quarter.
Speaker #4: So, just to be prudent as we sort of set the foundation up for next year, we held guidance at the same for the full year.
Speaker #4: And so mechanically, I took a little from three queue and the rest from four queue, and that's where the numbers shake out that you allude to in your question.
Matt Hedberg: Mechanically, I took a little from Q3 and the rest from Q4, and that's where the numbers shaped out that you alluded to in your question.
Speaker #3: Thanks.
Rob Owens: Thanks.
Speaker #5: Thank you. We'll take our next question from Matt Hedberg with RBC. Our following question will be from Cash Ramgan at Goldman Sachs.
Moderator: Thank you. We'll take our next question from Matt Hedberg with RBC, and our following question will be from Kash Rangan at Goldman Sachs.
Speaker #7: Great, thanks for taking my question, guys. And Brian, congrats on everything you've done here, and best of luck. It's no flake. You know, a lot of great commentary this quarter.
Kash Rangan: Great. Thanks for taking my question, guys. Brian, congrats on everything you've done here and best of luck at Snowflake. A lot of great commentary this quarter. Thanks for the one-time disclosures on seat-based growth. That's great to hear. Obviously, a lot of exciting things around Duo Agent platform, and I think we're all excited to hear about what the consumption element may add to that as we go, understanding it's going to take time to roll into the model. My question is, there's a lot of go-to-market changes that were announced here and kind of a rethinking how to accelerate new customer lands. How long should we expect some of those changes to take place and ultimately drive sort of the positive implications that, Bill, you noted on the call?
Speaker #7: You know, thanks for the one-time disclosures on seat-based growth. That's great to hear. And obviously, a lot of exciting things around the Duo agent platform, and I think we're all excited to hear about what the consumption element may add to that.
Speaker #7: As we go, understanding it's going to take time to roll into the model. But I guess, you know, my question is, there are a lot of go-to-market changes that were announced here and kind of rethinking how to accelerate new customer lands.
Speaker #7: I guess, you know, how long should we expect some of those changes to take place and ultimately drive sort of the positive implications that, you know, Bill, you noted on the call?
Speaker #6: Yeah, great question, Matt. Thank you. You know, I'm really excited to have Ian join the team. He hit the ground running. I'm really happy with how the team handled the transition; it went really smoothly, and we're pleased with what the team did this quarter.
Bill Staples: Yeah, great question, Matt. Thank you. I'm really excited to have Ian join the team. He hit the ground running, really happy with how the team handled the transition and it went really smoothly, and we're pleased with what the team did this quarter. Ian's a really thoughtful, strategic, and data-driven leader that's optimizing for both the mid to long term as we look past the billion revenue mark and setting up the organization to be able to scale to multi-billions in revenue while making the best of every quarter. The changes that he's envisioning and kind of the timelines that we have in mind are really about ramping kind of three things over H2 as we look to FY2027 and beyond. Specifically, first, as I shared, we're focusing on ramping a new business division.
Speaker #6: Ian's a really thoughtful, strategic, and data-driven leader that's optimizing for both the mid- to long-term, as we look past the $1 billion revenue mark.
Speaker #6: And setting up the organization to be able to scale to multi-billions in revenue while making the best of every quarter. So the changes that he's envisioning and kind of the timelines that we have in mind are really about ramping kind of three things over H2 as we look to FY27 and beyond.
Speaker #6: Specifically, first, as I shared, we're focusing on ramping a new business division. This is really focused on first-order acquisition and post-sales motion to accelerate value realization and module adoption by enterprise customers.
Bill Staples: This is really focused on first quarter acquisition and post-sales motion to accelerate value realization and module adoption by enterprise customers. That'll ramp across H2, and we hope to see some results early in FY2027. Second, he's also evolving our enterprise sales motion with more sophistication. That means increasing our pipeline coverage and improving sales playbooks to account for the AI opportunity and stronger coverage of our entire product portfolio. It was only a few years ago we kind of had two SKUs, Premium and Ultimate. Now we've got a lot more in the bag and a customer journey to help our customers navigate. I know they're all really needed. Third, he's also looking at sales capacity. Now we're good on capacity this year. Everything's in the guidance, but we're starting again to look ahead and make adjustments to help us scale beyond that billion-dollar mark.
Speaker #6: That'll ramp across H2, and then we hope to see some results early in FY27. Second, he's also evolving our enterprise sales motion with more sophistication.
Speaker #6: That means increasing our pipeline coverage and improving sales playbooks to account for the AI opportunity and stronger coverage of our entire product portfolio. It was only a few years ago we kind of had two SKUs: premium and ultimate.
Speaker #6: Now we've got a lot more in the bag and a customer journey to help our customers navigate, and those are all really needed. A third, he's also looking at sales capacity.
Speaker #6: Now, we're good on capacity this year. Everything's in the guidance. But we're starting again to look ahead and make adjustments that help us scale beyond that $1 billion mark.
Speaker #6: That means things like deeper coverage and established markets and install base, stronger investment in growth markets, and more verticalization and specialization as part of our coverage model.
Bill Staples: That means things like deeper coverage in established markets and install base, stronger investment in growth markets, and more verticalization and specialization as part of our coverage model. Those are all, I think, really meaningful and strategic changes that we're managing across the H2 timeframe as we start to ramp up and prepare for FY2027.
Speaker #6: So those are all, I think, really meaningful and strategic changes that we're managing across the H2 timeframe as we start to ramp up and prepare for FY27.
Speaker #4: And And Matt, the only thing I'll the only thing I'll add on to that, 100% correct, is that, you know, we've stuck to the full year guidance, right?
Matt Hedberg: Matt, the only thing I'll add on to that, 100% correct, is that we stuck to the full-year guidance, right? In the second quarter, we had some one-time events that elevated second quarter by the beat. We're going to deliver those changes and still deliver the full-year revenue number that we committed to last quarter.
Speaker #4: In the second quarter, we had some one-time events that elevated the second quarter results. As a result, we're going to deliver those changes and still achieve the full-year revenue number that we committed to last quarter.
Speaker #5: Perfect, thank you. We'll take our next question from Cash Ramgan from Goldman Sachs, and our following question will be from Koji Akita with Bank of America.
Moderator: Perfect. Thank you. We'll take our next question from Kash Rangan from Goldman Sachs, and our following question will be from Koji Ikeda with Bank of America. Kash? Kash, I believe you're on mute.
Speaker #5: Cash, Cash, I believe you're on mute.
Speaker #7: Hello, can you hear me okay?
Koji Ikeda: Hello, can you hear me okay?
Speaker #5: Yes, we can hear you.
Moderator: Yes, you can.
Speaker #7: All right, great. Thank you so much. Sorry about the confusion for the earnings conference; what's happening at the same time. So, Brian, sorry to see you go to another opportunity. Bill.
Koji Ikeda: All right. Great. Thank you so much. Sorry about the confusion of four earnings conference calls happening at the same time. Brian, sorry to see you go to another opportunity. Bill, can you talk a little bit more about the go-to-market transition, a little bit more color on what exactly you're trying to accomplish? What does success look like in the transition time to achieve the desired results from a go-to-market perspective? It's good to see the reacceleration of the business, so congrats on that. Thank you.
Speaker #7: Can you talk a little bit more about the go-to-market transition? A little bit more color on what exactly you're trying to accomplish, what does success look like, and the transition time to achieve the desired results from a go-to-market perspective?
Speaker #7: And it's good to see the re-acceleration of the business, so congrats on that. Thank you.
Speaker #6: Yeah, Cash. The previous question I covered some of those changes already. Just to recap them quickly: the new business division focused on first-order motion and accelerating module adoption for value realization. Second, around our enterprise sales motion, increasing pipeline coverage and sales playbooks across our product portfolio. And then third, looking at, you know, more sophistication in how we look at sales capacity.
Bill Staples: Yeah, Kash, the previous question I covered some of those changes already. Just to recap them quickly, new business division focused on first-order motion and accelerating module adoption for value realization. Second, around our enterprise sales motion, increasing pipeline coverage, sales playbooks across our product portfolio. Third, looking at more sophistication in how we look at sales capacity. We've got everything we need for this year, but looking ahead, how do we evolve for deeper coverage in established markets, but also investment in growth markets as well as verticalization and specialization? Those are all changes that, again, we'll be ramping throughout H2 as we look towards FY2027 and scaling beyond the billion mark.
Speaker #6: We've got everything we need for this year, but looking ahead, how do we evolve for deeper coverage and established markets, but also invest in growth markets as well as verticalization and specialization?
Speaker #6: Those are all changes that, again, will be ramping throughout H2 as we look towards FY27 and scaling beyond the $1 billion mark.
Speaker #5: Perfect, thank you. We'll take our next question from Koji Akita from Bank of America, and our following question will be from Derek Wood with TD Cowan.
Moderator: Perfect. Thank you. We'll take our next question from Koji Ikeda from Bank of America, and our following question will be from Derrick Wood with TD Cowen. Koji, can you hear us?
Speaker #5: Koji, can you hear us?
Speaker #8: Yep, can you hear me okay? Is this better?
Derrick Wood: Yep, can you hear me okay? Is this better?
Speaker #5: Yes, we can hear you.
Moderator: Yes, we can hear you.
Speaker #8: Yeah, sorry about that. So I wanted to ask a question on the SMB and the prepared remarks you talked about. SMB softness, potentially persisting for the rest of the year, rest of the year.
Derrick Wood: Sorry about that. I wanted to ask a question on the SMB and the prepared remarks you talked about, SMB softness potentially persisting for the rest of the year. A little part of me can't help but think that maybe code generation tools or other hype dev tools out there are potentially creating some budget shifting with the SMBs out there as they're trying to look for the most efficient efficiency-gaining tools right now. What are you seeing out there from the SMB side specifically that is driving that softness, kind of statement out there? How long could the softness persist and what needs to happen out there outside of the macro for maybe the SMB segment to get bigger? Last question on the SMB is how big is the SMB as a percentage of revenue today? Thank you.
Speaker #8: And a little part of me can't help but think that maybe code generation tools and other hype dev tools out there are potentially creating some budget shifting with the SMBs as they're trying to look for the most efficient tools to gain efficiency right now.
Speaker #8: And so what are you seeing out there from the SMB side specifically that is driving that softness, you know, kind of statement out there, you know, how long could the softness persist?
Speaker #8: And what needs to happen out there outside of the macro for maybe the SMB segment to get bigger? And maybe last question on the SMB is, how big is the SMB as a percentage of revenue today?
Speaker #8: Thank you.
Speaker #6: Yeah, Koji, thanks for the question. I was going to touch on the size of it. And so it's only roughly about 8% of the total business.
Bill Staples: Yeah, Koji, thanks for the question. I was going to touch on the size of it. It's only roughly about 8% of the total business, so the size itself is relatively small. Since we did the price increase, we talked about the SMB being a little bit more price sensitive. We've run a number of promos and promotions, and we've played around with pricing and packaging a little. It came in lighter than expected. It's sort of a no-touch; it comes through the web store. We don't have a big team on it trying to push it, but we're continuing to play with pricing and packaging and so forth. We just wanted to call it out for something that we've seen prior quarters. It is a smaller piece of our business, and it's something that we're continuing to pay attention to.
Speaker #6: And so, the size itself is relatively small. You know, since we did the price increase, we talked about the SMB being a little bit more price-sensitive.
Speaker #6: And we've run a number of promos and promotions and we've played around with pricing and packaging a little. And so it came in lighter than expected.
Speaker #6: It's sort of a no-touch; it comes through the web store. And so we don't have a big team on it trying to push it, but we're continuing to play with pricing and packaging and so forth.
Speaker #6: And so we just wanted to call it out for something that we've seen in prior quarters. It is a smaller piece of our business, and it's something that we're continuing to pay attention to.
Speaker #8: Thank you.
Derrick Wood: Thank you.
Speaker #5: Thank you. We'll take our next question from Derek Wood with TD Cowan, and our following question will come from Sanjeet Singh from Morgan Stanley.
Moderator: Thank you. We'll take our next question from Derrick Wood with TD Cowen, and our following question will come from Sanjeev Singh from Morgan Stanley. Derrick, you may go ahead.
Speaker #5: Derek, you may go ahead.
Speaker #7: Okay, I'm here. Brian, congrats on the next chapter. I have some questions for Bill. Bill, you mentioned you know a lot of questions around competitive conditions, and it’s really interesting to hear some of the findings you had from your survey.
Sanjeev Singh: Okay. I'm here. Brian, congrats on the next chapter. My question's for Bill here. Bill, you mentioned a lot of questions around competitive conditions, and really interesting to hear some of the findings you had from your survey. One question we get, I'd love to hear your answer on is, you know, some worry that these new AI coding vendors will move from the IDE to more parts of the lifecycle that you guys plan. Could you just talk about the defensibility of your platform and how you feel about, you know, the risks of those vendors ultimately competing with your core offering or the defensibility that you guys have?
Speaker #7: One question we get, I'd love to hear your answer on is, you know, some worry that these these new AI coding vendors will move from the IDE to more parts of the lifecycle that you guys play in.
Speaker #7: So could you just could you talk about the defensibility of your platform and how you feel about you know the risks of those vendors ultimately competing with your core offering or the defensibility that you guys have?
Speaker #6: Yeah, thanks, Derek. You know, Gitlab really does something different than the code generation tools. They generate code, and as we've shared previously, that accounts for about 20% of a developer's time.
Bill Staples: Yeah, thanks, Derek. GitLab really does something different than the code generation tools. They generate code, and as we've shared previously, that accounts for about 20% of a developer's time, while 80% of the time is really managing change of that code across the software lifecycle so they can serve customers' needs. We really pick up where those code generation tools leave off. It's sort of like great ideas are pretty easy, but executing them and delivering results is where all the hard work comes in. You can think of GitLab as basically change management for source code that's generated either by humans or by AI tools. Our embracing of those tools is really part of the Duo Agent platform strategy.
Speaker #6: While 80% of the time is really managing the change of that code across the software lifecycle, it's at a conserved customer's needs. So we've really picked up where those code generation tools leave off.
Speaker #6: And you know, it's sort of like great ideas are pretty easy, but executing them and delivering results is where all the hard work comes in.
Speaker #6: You can think of GitLab as basically change management for source code. It's generated either by humans or by AI tools. Our embracing of those tools is really part of the Duo agent platform strategy.
Speaker #6: So as you saw in 18.3 released last month, we've got a great partnership going now with Cursor, so that they're seamless integration between Cursor and Gitlab, so that code can flow and developers can have a great experience.
Bill Staples: As you saw in 18.3 release last month, we've got a great partnership going now with Cursor so that there's seamless integration between Cursor and GitLab so that code can flow and developers can have a great experience across GitLab and Cursor. We've also taken the CLI-based code generation tools that are really popular right now, like Cloud Code, like Gemini CLI, like Amazon Q, and we're bringing those into GitLab natively. Those engineering teams are building incredible AI-based dev tools. Now those are embedded within GitLab. Customers can choose to use them or our own agents seamlessly within GitLab and take advantage of all of the data and workflows that are already in our platform. We really think of it as additive and creating more opportunity for us, not a competitive threat.
Speaker #6: Across Gitlab and Cursor, but also we've taken the CLI-based code generation tools that are really popular right now, like Cloud Code, like Gemini CLI, like Amazon Q, and we're bringing those into Gitlab natively.
Speaker #6: So, those engineering teams are building incredible dev and AI-based dev tools. Now, those are embedded within GitLab; customers can choose to use them or our own agents seamlessly within GitLab and take advantage of all of the data and workflows that are already in our platform.
Speaker #6: So we really think of it as as additive and creating more opportunity for us, not a competitive threat.
Speaker #7: Understood, thank you.
Sanjeev Singh: Understood. Thank you.
Speaker #5: Thank you. We'll take our next question from Sanjeet Singh from Morgan Stanley and our following question will be from Brian Essex with JP Morgan.
Moderator: Thank you. We'll take our next question from Sanjeev Singh from Morgan Stanley, and our following question will be from Brian Essex with J.P. Morgan.
Speaker #8: Thank you for taking the questions, and congrats, Brian. It was great working with you, and all the best in your future role. I had a question for you, Bill.
Derrick Wood: Thank you for taking the questions, and congrats, Brian. It was great working with you, and all the best in your future role. I had a question for you, Bill, on sort of new logo, new business side of the house. When we look at the absolute level of growth in terms of how fast your base customers are growing, it's in double digits, which I would say is not bad, probably average or slightly above average for the rest of software. If we look at the trend line over the last several years, we've seen, I think, a string of double-digit quarters of year-over-year deceleration in terms of customer adds and net new adds. I wanted to get your prognosis for why that was the case.
Speaker #8: On the sort of new logo, new business side of the house, when we look at the absolute level of growth in terms of how fast your base customers are growing, it's in double digits, which I would say is not bad—probably average or slightly above average for the rest of software.
Speaker #8: But when we look at the trend line over the last several years, we've seen, I think, a string of double-digit quarters of year-over-year deceleration in terms of customer ads and net new ads.
Speaker #8: And so I wanted to get your prognosis for why that was the case. And as we look forward, as you bring on the new leadership team, how do you think of the timeline for turning that back around?
Derrick Wood: As we look forward and you bring on the new leadership team, what do you think the timeline is for turning that back around?
Speaker #6: Yeah, that's very great question, Sanjeet. It's why our number one objective as a company is to focus on that first order and new customer acquisition, because of that trend line you mentioned.
Bill Staples: Yeah, that's a very great question, Sanjeev. It's why our number one objective as a company is to focus on that first order in new customer acquisition because of that trend line you mentioned. It's really important that we do that because if you look at the cohort data that we shared, our 2016 cohort has grown 100x, and every quarter we build new cohorts of future growth. It has been decelerating. I would say that probably the primary cause of it is we have not incentivized or created a specialized sales force focused on first order. We've let our reps bring in net ARR growth the way that they're able to do that each quarter. Over time, as our revenue base has grown, obviously, that has come in more and more through expansion as opposed to first order.
Speaker #6: It's really important that we do that because if you look at the cohort data that we shared, our 2016 cohort has grown 100X. And every quarter we build new cohorts of future growth.
Speaker #6: And it has been decelerating, I would say that probably the primary cause of it is we have not incentivized or created a specialized sales force focused on first order.
Speaker #6: You know, we've led our reps bring in net ARR growth, you know, the way that they're able to do that each quarter. And over time, as our revenue base has grown, obviously that has come in more and more through expansion as opposed to first order.
Speaker #6: That's why I mentioned in the prepared remarks, it's time to balance our investments there and have more specialized sellers focused on first order as well as a new product-led growth approach to bring in customers through a self-service experience.
Bill Staples: That's why I mentioned in the prepared remarks it's time to balance our investments there and have more specialized sellers focused on first order as well as a new product-led growth approach to bring in customers through a self-service experience. Both of those, in terms of timeline, will begin ramping now throughout H2, and we hope to see early returns on that in FY27.
Speaker #6: Both of those, in terms of timeline, will begin ramping now throughout H2, and we hope to see early returns on that in FY27.
Speaker #8: Appreciate the thoughts.
Derrick Wood: Appreciate the thoughts.
Speaker #5: Thank you. Our next question will come from Brian Essex with J.P. Morgan, and our following question will be from Gray Powell with BTIG. Brian?
Moderator: Thank you. Our next question will come from Brian Essex with J.P. Morgan, and our following question will be from Gray Powell with BTIG. Gray.
Speaker #3: Hi, good afternoon, and thank you for taking the question. Brian, congrats from me as well. Bill, I was wondering if you could maybe expand on maybe the last question a little bit in terms of, you know, the hiring of Manav or appointment of Manav to chief product and marketing officer.
Mike Sikos: Hi, good afternoon, and thank you for taking the question. Brian, congrats from me as well. Bill, I was wondering if you could maybe expand on the last question a little bit in terms of the hiring of Manav or appointment of Manav to Chief Product and Marketing Officer. Any commonalities or analogies that you saw with New Relic with respect to the way that you anticipate similar efforts to benefit GitLab Inc. with planned go-to-market changes? I'd just love to get your take on how these initiatives might affect the growth trajectory of the business as well as the expense associated with incremental investment. Thank you.
Speaker #3: Any commonalities or analogies that you saw with new routes with respect to the way that you anticipate similar efforts to benefit Gitlab with planned go-to-market changes?
Speaker #3: Just love to get your take on how these initiatives might affect the growth trajectory of the business as well as the expense associated with incremental investment.
Speaker #3: Thank you.
Speaker #6: Yeah, you know, I've been building developer tools and platforms for about 30 years, and it represents a really unique challenge because you've got a community of engineers who are very passionate about the tools they use.
Bill Staples: Yeah, you know what? I've been building developer tools and platforms for about 30 years, and it represents a really unique challenge because you've got a community of engineers who are very passionate about the tools they use, and they don't have budget, and therefore you've got to work with both a top-down selling motion where you can talk to economic buyers, have a relationship with those who do have the budgets and lead those engineers, but also have a continual effort to reach them with your new technology and innovation and win their hearts and minds so that they're passionate about your products and advocate for that internally. There's a commonality there between New Relic and GitLab Inc., but also, you know, most developer tools.
Speaker #6: And they don't have budget, and therefore you've got to work with both a top-down selling motion, where you can, you know, talk to economic buyers, have a relationship with those who do have the budgets, and lead those engineers. But also, have a continual effort to reach them with your new technology and innovation, and win their hearts and minds so that they're passionate about your product and advocate for that internally.
Speaker #6: So there's a commonality there between New Relic and GitLab, but also most developer tools. That's why, as you look at the explosive growth of new AI tools like Cloud Code and Cursor, you see that kind of rapid adoption and revenue growth that a product-led growth approach can bring.
Bill Staples: That's why, as you look at the explosive growth of new AI tools like Cloud Code and Cursor, you see that kind of rapid adoption and revenue growth that a product-led growth approach can bring, which then drives more enterprise adoption over time. This explains in part some of the delta between what you see with those new modern tools that have taken largely a product-led growth approach and GitLab Inc. with Duo, which in its first few years has taken more of a sales-led approach where we've had a multi-quarter sales cycle, full-year contractual commitment, upfront payment required, platform adoption. Those are all gating factors right now with our Duo strategy, which in turn slows product feedback and iteration.
Speaker #6: Which then drives more enterprise adoption over time. This explains in part some of the delta between what you see with those new modern tools that have taken largely a product-led growth approach and GitLab with Duo, which in its first few years has taken more of a sales-led approach where we've had a multi-quarter sales cycle, full year contractual commitment, upfront payment required, platform adoption. Those are all gating factors right now with our Duo strategy, which in turn slows product feedback and iteration.
Speaker #6: So by moving to this product-led growth and sales-led growth approach, which Manav and I both have years of experience with, we're really confident that we can have the best of both worlds.
Bill Staples: By moving to this product-led growth and sales-led growth approach, which Manav and I both have years of experience with, we're really confident that we can have the best of both worlds. We'll continue to service the large Fortune 100 customers that we have today with a high-touch sales-led approach, but then also increase customer acquisition, adoption, and innovation velocity with a more direct feedback channel from customers with our product-led growth approach.
Speaker #6: We'll continue to service the large Fortune 100 customers that we have today with a high-touch, sales-led approach. However, we will also increase customer acquisition, adoption, and innovation velocity with a more direct feedback channel from customers through our product-led growth approach.
Speaker #3: That's super helpful color, thank you.
Mike Sikos: That's super helpful. Thank you.
Speaker #5: Thank you. Our next question will come from Gray Powell with BTIG, and our following question will come from Mike Kikos with Needham. Gray?
Moderator: Thank you. Our next question will come from Gray Powell with BTIG, and our following question will come from Mike Kikos with Needham. Gray?
Speaker #7: All right, great. Thanks. Just want to make sure you can hear me okay. I know some others have had some issues.
Matt Hedberg: All right, great. Thanks. Just want to make sure you can hear me okay. I know some others have had some issues.
Speaker #5: Yes, we can hear you.
Moderator: Yes, we can.
Speaker #7: All right, awesome. Thank you. Thanks for taking the question. Okay, I know you've gotten a lot on the changes to the go-to-market and sales motion.
Matt Hedberg: All right, awesome. Thank you. Thanks for taking the question. I know you've gotten a lot on the changes to the go-to-market sales motion. I'm a little bit confused, so I apologize in advance, but I'm going to ask another one. I'm just trying to get a sense as to like the potential disruption in the second half of the year, and specifically like how dramatically are your reps having their account packages changed? It is just the middle of the year. Are you changing sales incentives for fiscal 2026? I'm just trying to like think through the mechanics of how this works.
Speaker #7: I'm a little bit confused, so I apologize in advance if I'm going to ask another one. I'm just trying to get a sense as to like the potential disruption in the second half of the year.
Speaker #7: And specifically, like how dramatically are your reps having their account packages changed? And then it is just the middle of the year, like are you changing sales incentives for fiscal '26?
Speaker #7: So, I'm just trying to think through the mechanics of how this works.
Speaker #6: Yeah, no changes to the compensation plan, no changes to the territories and customer assignments. This is really about beginning to ramp up and hire new teams and adjustments to the enablement and training and the sales plays that they go execute every quarter.
Bill Staples: Yeah, no changes to the compensation plan, no changes to the territories and customer assignments. This is really about beginning to ramp up and hire new teams and adjustments to the enablement and training and the sales plays that they go and execute every quarter. I don't expect them to be disruptive. We've included all of that factored into our guidance for the remainder of the year. We're looking forward to really setting up for a stronger FY27.
Speaker #6: So I don't expect them to be disruptive. We've included all of that factored into our guidance for the remainder of the year. And yeah, we're looking forward to really setting up for a stronger FY27.
Speaker #7: Okay, and then just to be clear, is it going to a Hunter Farmer model or like I'm just want to make sure that I'm sorry to keep pressing, but I just want to.
Matt Hedberg: Okay. Just to be clear, is it going to a hunter-farmer model? I just want to make sure that I, sorry to keep pressing, but I just want to.
Speaker #6: Yeah, sometimes people use that terminology. Hunter's being sort of focused on new customer acquisition and farmers focusing on more on customer value realization and expansion.
Bill Staples: Yeah, sometimes people use that terminology, hunters being sort of focused on new customer acquisition and farmers focusing more on customer value realization and expansion. You can think of that. It's not purely, you know, it's not going to look purely that way or that kind of division, but the new team will definitely be focused on customer acquisition as the only focus that they have. Our existing team members with existing customers are largely focused on expansion as well as opportunistic new customer acquisition as the opportunity allows.
Speaker #6: You can think of that as not purely, you know, it's not going to look purely that way or that kind of division, but the new team will definitely be focused on customer acquisition as the only focus that they have.
Speaker #6: And then our existing team members with existing customers are largely focused on expansion as well as opportunistic new customer acquisition as the opportunity allows.
Speaker #7: Understood. Okay, thank you very much.
Matt Hedberg: Understood. Okay, thank you very much.
Speaker #5: Thank you. We'll take our next question from Mike Kikos from Needham. And our following question will be from Jonathan Ruckheiver from Cantor Fitzgerald. Mike?
Moderator: Thank you. We'll take our next question from Mike Kikos from Needham, and our following question will be from Jonathan Rookhyber from Cantor Fitzgerald. Mike?
Speaker #3: Hey, you have Mike Kikos here. Thanks for taking the questions, guys. And I forgot to circle around on the go-to-market as well here. Since it seems like we're touching on it with Sanjeet and Ray's questioning, but for that go-to-market dynamic, can you help us think about how you’re incentivizing the proper behavior by using comp as a tool?
Mike Sikos: Hey, you have Mike Sikos here. Thanks for taking the questions, guys. I'm going to circle around on the go-to-market as well here since it seems like we're touching on it with Sanjeev and Gray's questioning. For that go-to-market dynamic, can you help us think about where you're, how you're incentivizing the proper behavior by using comp as a tool? I would argue that GitLab's historical choice of letting the reps go after bookings or ARR is probably what led us to over-index towards the expansion with existing customers at the risk of the new logo. How are you looking to use comp as a tool in that endeavor on these new initiatives? I have a follow-up.
Speaker #3: I would argue that GitLab's historical choice of letting the reps go after bookings or ARR is probably what led us to over-index toward the expansion with existing customers at the risk of the new logo.
Speaker #3: So, how are you looking to use comp as a tool in that endeavor on these new initiatives? And then I have a follow-up.
Speaker #6: Yeah, really good question. Aligned compensation is an important factor in terms of driving the right behaviors and motivations. While we've done some light touches to incentivize new customer growth this quarter, it's largely the same compensation model that we've had for years.
Bill Staples: Yeah, really good question. Aligned compensation is an important factor in terms of driving the right behaviors and motivations. While we've done some light touches to incentivize new customer growth this quarter, it's largely the same compensation model that we've had for years. You know, it works for a company that's, I'd say, sub-billion in scale. Obviously, GitLab Inc. has enjoyed lots of rapid growth. Now that we're reaching that billion-dollar scale mark and we aspire to go to a second billion and beyond, more specialization is just a natural evolution of the enterprise go-to-market motion. We've got to invest in new customer acquisition as a dedicated motion while continuing to service existing customers and drive expansion. We've also got to drive more specialization in terms of verticals. We've got a great public sector business. We've now got a nice financial services vertical as well.
Speaker #6: And you know, it works for a company that's, I'd say, sub-billion in scale, and obviously getting that lab has enjoyed lots of rapid growth.
Speaker #6: But now that we're reaching that billion-dollar scale mark and we aspire to go to the second billion and beyond, more specialization is just a natural evolution of the enterprise go-to-market motion.
Speaker #6: You know, we've got to invest in new customer acquisition as a dedicated motion while continuing to service existing customers and drive expansion. We've also got to drive more specialization in terms of verticals.
Speaker #6: We've got a great public sector business. We've now got a nice financial services vertical as well, and we'll continue to build those businesses out as large customer bases with discrete go-to-market motions.
Bill Staples: We'll continue to build those businesses out as large customer bases with discrete go-to-market motion. I'd characterize really what we're doing as a pretty natural evolution for enterprise sales, and it's going to help set us up for that second billion and beyond.
Speaker #6: So I characterize really what we're doing as a pretty natural evolution for enterprise sales, and it's going to help set us up for that second billion and beyond.
Speaker #3: That's great. And just a quick follow-up: I know you guys are going through the hiring and putting these initiatives in place in the back half of the year, but can you just remind us what is the typical timeline for a new hire on that go-to-market side to ramp?
Mike Sikos: That's great. Just a quick follow-up. I know you guys are going through the hiring and putting these initiatives in place in the back half of the year. Can you just remind us what is the typical timeline for a new hire on that go-to-market side to ramp, just so we can make sure that we're thinking about the contribution next year accordingly? Thank you.
Speaker #3: Just so we can make sure that we're thinking about the contribution next year accordingly. Thank you.
Speaker #6: Yeah, our ramp-up period for enterprise sales reps is between six and nine months.
Bill Staples: Our ramp-up period for enterprise sales rep is between six and nine months.
Speaker #5: Perfect, thank you. We'll take our next question from Jonathan Ruckheiver from Cantor Fitzgerald, and our following question from Romeo Lenshao with Barclays. Jonathan?
Moderator: Perfect. Thank you. We'll take our next question from Jonathan Rookhyber from Cantor Fitzgerald, and our following question from Romeo Lenschaw with Barclays. Jonathan?
Speaker #7: Yeah, thank you. And then Brian, congratulations and it was great getting to know you and working with you. So I, you know, looking at Gitlab 18, and now the Duo agent platform, I think, you know, what stands out to me is just, you know, how pervasive AI is becoming.
Matt Hedberg: Yeah, thank you. Brian, congratulations. It was great getting to know you and working with you. Looking at GitLab 18 and now the Duo Agent platform, what stands out to me is just how pervasive AI is becoming across the platform. It's not just the code suggestion and review. It's around project management and orchestration. To me, it really seems like it's shifting the value proposition or has the potential to shift that value proposition away from these code suggestion tools to a more platform approach. I realize it's early with Duo Agent, but any telltale signs that indicate this recognition might be coming to the surface? You also mentioned quarterly updates to the product, or I read that somewhere. Any color on where that innovation is heading with Duo Agent platform would be appreciated.
Speaker #7: Across the platform, and it's not just, you know, the code suggestion and review, you know, it's around project management and orchestration and, you know, to me, it really seems like it's shifting the value proposition or has the potential to shift that value proposition away from these code suggestion tools to, you know, to a more platform approach.
Speaker #7: And so I realize it's early with Duo agent, but are there any telltale signs that indicate you believe this recognition might be coming to the surface?
Speaker #7: And then you also mentioned, you know, quarterly updates to the product or I read that somewhere. Any color on where that innovation is heading with Duo agent platform would be appreciated.
Speaker #6: Yeah, thank you for the question. You know, it's really exciting to see Duo agent platform shape up. We released every single month and we launched Duo agent platform in 18.2.
Bill Staples: Yeah, thank you for the question. It's really exciting to see GitLab Duo Agent platform shape up. We release every single month, and we launched GitLab Duo Agent platform in 18.2. Last month with 18.3, we provided an additional set of new features and capabilities, including the partnerships that I mentioned with Cursor, Anthropic, OpenAI, and Amazon. We are just going to continue each month to expand the scope and the quality of GitLab Duo Agent platform. Each month, we continue to engage customers as well and get their feedback. Feedback has been really positive. I'm personally involved in customer conversations pretty much every single week to get their feedback and also to make sure they're aware of the innovation direction we're going. There are really multiple things they're excited by. Number one, our platform approach makes us ideal for AI-based collaboration.
Speaker #6: And then last month, with 18.3, we provided an additional set of new features and capabilities, including the partnership that I mentioned with Cursor, Anthropic, OpenAI, and Amazon.
Speaker #6: And we're just going to continue each month to expand the scope and quality of the Duo agent platform. Each month, we continue to engage customers as well and get their feedback.
Speaker #6: And feedback has been really positive. I’m personally involved in customer conversations pretty much every single week to get their feedback and also to make sure they’re aware of the innovation direction we’re going.
Speaker #6: And there's really, you know, multiple things they're excited by. Number one, you know, our platform approach makes us ideal for AI-based collaboration. What we bring with the unified data platform is rich context.
Bill Staples: What we bring with the unified data platform is rich context, and with AI, context is king. We bring all that context and can drive higher quality agentic outcomes and lower inference costs. The second thing that they're really excited by is our open ecosystem approach. The ability for them to continue to use GitLab but have native integrations with the leading AI dev tools integrated directly with GitLab gives them the best choice. Not only can they run their own cloud of choice, use their own AI providers of choice, but they can also access and use the best AI tools on the market. Third, the other value proposition of GitLab Duo Agent platform that's exciting for them is we're providing more than just purpose-built agents.
Speaker #6: And with AI, context is king. So we bring all that context and can drive higher quality agentic outcomes and lower inference costs. The second thing that they're really excited by is our open ecosystem approach.
Speaker #6: The ability for them to continue to use GitLab, but have native integrations with the leading AI development tools integrated directly with GitLab, gives them the best choice.
Speaker #6: Not only can they run their own cloud of choice, use their own AI providers of choice, but they can also access and use the best AI tools on the market.
Speaker #6: And then third, the other value proposition of the Duo agent platform that's exciting for them is we're providing more than just purpose-built agents. We're providing the ability to create custom agents and custom agent flows that can solve specific engineering challenges that they have.
Bill Staples: We're providing the ability to create custom agents and custom agent flows that can solve specific engineering challenges that they have, challenges that are unique to their business and their software processes. That's really something, again, I haven't seen any other vendor do. Having built software for 30 years, I can tell you every engineering team has their set of challenges that no general purpose LLM can solve. By providing the platform that allows for that level of customization and extensibility, customers are going to have an incredible AI-based approach to solving their toughest challenges. Really excited by the data feedback so far. We're aiming for general availability at the end of this year, and can't wait to see what customers do with it.
Speaker #6: Challenges that are unique to their business and their software processes. And that's really something again, I hadn't seen any other vendor do and having built software for 30 years, I can tell you every engineering team has their set of challenges that no general purpose LLM can solve.
Speaker #6: So, by providing the platform that allows for that level of customization and extensibility, customers are going to have an incredible AI-based approach to solving their toughest challenges.
Speaker #6: Really excited by the data feedback so far. Again, we're aiming for GA at the end of this year, and I can't wait to see what customers do with it.
Speaker #8: Yep, helpful. Thanks, Bill.
Matt Hedberg: Yeah, helpful. Thanks, Bill.
Speaker #5: Thank you. And our last question today will come from Romeo Lenshao with Barclays.
Moderator: Thank you. Our last question today will come from Raimo Lenschow with Barclays.
Speaker #7: Hey guys, this is Damon Kavan off of Ramo. Thanks for the question, and congrats on the new role, Brian. Nice to see the acceleration in sufficient SaaS business in Q2 to 39%.
Mike Sikos: Hey, guys. This is Damon Cogan off of Rainbow. Thanks for the question and congrats on the new role, Brian. I see the acceleration in SaaS business in Q2 to 39%. Can you help us understand the drivers of this performance? Is this driven by some of the newer AI coding tools or maybe execution from the GitLab sales team? If I can squeeze maybe one more, were there any one-time items in the quarter that we should keep in mind? Should we use the implied Q4 growth rate as a proxy for growth for next year? Thanks, guys.
Speaker #7: Can you help us understand the drivers of this performance? Is this driven by some of the newer AI coding tools? Or maybe execution from the GitLab sales team?
Speaker #7: And then, if I can squeeze maybe one more? Were there any one-time items in the quarter that we should keep in mind? And then should we use the implied four-quarter growth rate as a proxy for growth for next year?
Speaker #7: Thanks, guys.
Speaker #6: This is Brian, and thank you. Yeah, three questions in one. So I'll answer parts A, B, and C. The implied growth rate for Q4, we talked about due to the go-to-market changes that are going to set us up for success in FY27 and beyond.
Bill Staples: Thank you. Yeah, three questions in the one. I'll answer part A, B, and C. The implied growth rate for 4Q, we talked about due to the go-to-market changes that are going to set us up for success in FY2027 and beyond. We held full-year revenue guidance flat. We took the beat in 2Q and spread it across 3Q and 4Q. I hope that gives you some insight on how the guidance was put together. What was there? I didn't know you were going to ask three questions.
Speaker #6: We held full-year revenue guidance flat. So, we took the beat in Q2 and spread it across Q3 and Q4. I hope that gives you some insight on how the guidance is put together.
Speaker #6: What was there? I didn't know you were going to ask three questions. There was.
Speaker #7: Any one-time items for the second quarter?
Mike Sikos: Any one-time items for the second quarter?
Speaker #6: Yeah, so in the second quarter, there were two things that impacted the quarter. It was linearity. We had the strongest month one bookings in the last two years, booking over 20% of the quarter in month one.
Bill Staples: Yeah, so the second quarter, there were two things that impacted the quarter. It was the linearity. We had the strongest month one bookings in the last two years, booked over 20% of the quarter in month one. Typically, you know, in month three, you know, month is more heavily weighed towards month three. Also, we had a greater SaaS mix than we did self-managed if reverted back to historical norms. Actually, the other way around, self-managed versus SaaS. Self-managed, we get to recognize some upfront. They're one time in the quarter. You talked about, are we doing anything different on SaaS to push SaaS versus self-managed? We're agnostic to how the customer actually buys the product. We want to meet the customer where they want us to meet them.
Speaker #6: Typically, you know, month three, you know, it's more heavily weighed towards month three. And then also we had a greater SaaS mix than we did self-managed if reverted back to historical norms.
Speaker #6: Actually, the other way around: self-managed versus SaaS. And so, self-managed, we get to recognize some upfront. And so, there are one-time in the quarter.
Speaker #6: And then you talked about, are we doing anything different on SaaS to push SaaS versus self-managed? We're agnostic to how the customer actually buys the product.
Speaker #6: We want to meet the customer where they want us to meet them. SaaS is so much easier for them to get up and running and has a lower total cost of ownership for them.
Bill Staples: SaaS is so much easier for them to get up and running and has a lower total cost of ownership for them. We see SaaS and dedicated on dedicated with 92% year-over-year growth. We see both of them really being, you know, a great motivation for customers. They don't have to have the infrastructure. They can get up, run, and faster. They can realize their ROI quicker and so forth.
Speaker #6: And so we see SaaS and dedicated on dedicated, which was 92% year-over-year growth. We see both of them really being a great motivation for customers.
Speaker #6: They don't have to have the infrastructure. They can get up, run, and faster. They can realize their ROI quicker, and so forth.
Speaker #7: Thanks, guys.
Mike Sikos: Thanks, guys.
Speaker #5: Thank you. That concludes our Q&A. I would now like to turn the call over to Bill for closing remarks. Bill?
Moderator: Thank you. That concludes our Q&A. I would now like to turn the call over to Bill for closing remarks. Bill?
Speaker #6: Thank you. As we wrap up today, there are really three things that I hope you take away from the call that I'm genuinely excited about.
Bill Staples: Thank you. As we wrap up today, there's really three things that I hope you take away from the call that I'm genuinely excited about. First, our opportunity is enormous and only getting bigger. Our financials are strong and demonstrate a strong combination of free cash flow, margin, and revenue growth. Seats are growing. In Duo Agent platform, we're adding a new growth factor beyond seat growth by monetizing autonomous work done. Second, we have a really unique value proposition with our unified DevSecOps platform that only gets stronger because of AI. Context is king, and our unified platform provides that full lifecycle context. As the only pure-play, cloud, and model-neutral independent public company delivering DevSecOps, we offer the world independence. Build your software in your cloud of choice using your choice of AI vendors and tools and get the very best experience for your engineers.
Speaker #6: First, our opportunity is enormous and only getting bigger. Our financials are strong and demonstrate a strong combination of free cash flow, margin, and revenue growth.
Speaker #6: Seeds are growing. On the Duo agent platform, we're adding a new growth vector beyond seed growth by monetizing autonomous work done. Second, we have a really unique value proposition with our unified DevSecOps platform that only gets stronger because of AI.
Speaker #6: Context is king, and our unified platform provides that full lifecycle context. As the only pure-play cloud and model-neutral independent public company delivering DevSecOps, we offer the world independence.
Speaker #6: Build your software in your cloud of choice using your choice of AI vendors and tools and get the very best experience for your engineers.
Speaker #6: And third and finally, we're building a fantastic team with a combination of new executives and experienced team members that are excited to aim past the first billion in revenue and scale toward our second and beyond.
Bill Staples: Third and finally, we're building a fantastic team with a combination of new executives and experienced team members that are excited to aim past the first billion in revenue and scale toward our second and beyond. Thanks for joining the call today. I look forward to seeing you all in follow-up conversations throughout the quarter.