Q4 2025 Climb Global Solutions Inc Earnings Call
Sean Mansouri: Please stand by. Your program is about to begin. Good morning, everyone, thank you for participating in today's conference call to discuss Climb Global Solutions' financial results for Q4 and full year ended 31 December 2025. Joining us today are Climb CEO, Mr. Dale Foster, the company's CFO, Mr. Matthew Sullivan, and the company's investor relations advisor, Mr. Sean Mansouri, with Elevate IR. By now, everyone should have access to the Q4 and full year 2025 earnings press release, which was issued yesterday afternoon at approximately 4:05 PM Eastern Time. The release is available in the Investor Relations section of Climb Global Solutions website at www.climbglobalsolutions.com. This call will also be available for webcast replay on the company's website. Following management's prepared remarks, we'll open the call for your questions. I'd now like to turn the call over to Mr.
Operator: Good morning, everyone, thank you for participating in today's conference call to discuss Climb Global Solutions' financial results for Q4 and full year ended 31 December 2025. Joining us today are Climb CEO, Mr. Dale Foster, the company's CFO, Mr. Matthew Sullivan, and the company's investor relations advisor, Mr. Sean Mansouri, with Elevate IR. By now, everyone should have access to the Q4 and full year 2025 earnings press release, which was issued yesterday afternoon at approximately 4:05 PM Eastern Time. The release is available in the Investor Relations section of Climb Global Solutions website at www.climbglobalsolutions.com. This call will also be available for webcast replay on the company's website. Following management's prepared remarks, we'll open the call for your questions. I'd now like to turn the call over to Mr.
Speaker #2: Joining us today are Climb CEO, Mr. Dale Foster, the company CFO, Mr. Matthew Sullivan, and the company's investor relations advisor, Mr. Sean Mansouri, with Elevate IR.
Speaker #2: By now, everyone should have access to the fourth quarter and full year 2025 earnings press release which was issued yesterday afternoon at approximately 4:05 PM Eastern Time.
Speaker #2: The release is available in the investor relations section of Climb Global Solutions website at www.climbglobalsolutions.com. This call will also be available for webcast replay on the company's website following management's prepared remarks will open the call for your questions.
Speaker #2: I now like to turn the call over to Mr. Mansouri for introductory comments.
Sean Mansouri: Manzuri for introductory comments.
Operator: Manzuri for introductory comments.
Speaker #1: Thank you. Before I introduce Dale, I'd like to remind listeners that certain comments made on this conference call and webcast are considered forward-looking statements under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995.
Sean Mansouri: Thank you. Before I introduce Dale, I'd like to remind listeners that certain comments made on this conference call and webcast are considered forward-looking statements under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These forward-looking statements are subject to certain known and unknown risks and uncertainties, as well as assumptions that could cause actual results to differ materially from those reflected in these forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements are also subject to other risks and uncertainties that are described from time to time in the company's filings with the SEC. Do not place undue reliance on any forward-looking statements, which are being made only as of the date of this call. Except as required by law, the company undertakes no obligation to revise or publicly release the results of any revision to any forward-looking statements.
Sean Mansouri: Thank you. Before I introduce Dale, I'd like to remind listeners that certain comments made on this conference call and webcast are considered forward-looking statements under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These forward-looking statements are subject to certain known and unknown risks and uncertainties, as well as assumptions that could cause actual results to differ materially from those reflected in these forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements are also subject to other risks and uncertainties that are described from time to time in the company's filings with the SEC. Do not place undue reliance on any forward-looking statements, which are being made only as of the date of this call. Except as required by law, the company undertakes no obligation to revise or publicly release the results of any revision to any forward-looking statements.
Speaker #1: These forward-looking statements are subject to certain known and unknown risks and uncertainties as well as assumptions that could cause actual results to differ materially from those reflected in these forward-looking statements.
Speaker #1: These forward-looking statements are also subject to other risks and uncertainties that are described from time to time in the company's filings with the SEC, do not place undue reliance on any forward-looking statements, which are being made only as of the date of this call.
Speaker #1: Except as required by law, the company undertakes no obligation to revise or publicly release the results of any revision to any forward-looking statements. Our presentation also includes certain key operational metrics and non-gap financial measures including gross EBITDA, adjusted net income, and EPS, and effective margin as supplemental measures of performance of our business.
Sean Mansouri: Our presentation also includes certain key operational metrics and non-GAAP financial measures, including gross billings, Adjusted EBITDA, adjusted net income and EPS, and effective margin as supplemental measures of performance of our business. All non-GAAP measures have been reconciled to the most directly comparable GAAP measures in accordance with SEC rules. I'd now like to turn the call over to Climb CEO, Dale Foster.
Sean Mansouri: Our presentation also includes certain key operational metrics and non-GAAP financial measures, including gross billings, Adjusted EBITDA, adjusted net income and EPS, and effective margin as supplemental measures of performance of our business. All non-GAAP measures have been reconciled to the most directly comparable GAAP measures in accordance with SEC rules. I'd now like to turn the call over to Climb CEO, Dale Foster.
Speaker #1: All non-gap measures have been reconciled to the most directly comparable gap measures in accordance with SEC rules. I'd now like to turn the call over to Climb CEO, Dale Foster.
Speaker #2: Thank you, Sean, and good morning, everyone. 2025 was another exceptional year for Climb as we generated record results across all key financial metrics. These achievements reflect the continued execution of our teams that are driving organic growth by strengthening relationships with existing vendors and customers, collectively adding innovative technologies to our line card, and while driving and delivering operational efficiencies throughout our business.
Dale Foster: Thank you, Sean, good morning, everyone. 2025 was another exceptional year for Climb as we generated record results across all key financial metrics. These achievements reflect the continued execution of our teams that are driving organic growth by strengthening relationships with existing vendors and customers, selectively adding innovative technologies to our line card, and while driving and delivering operational efficiencies throughout our business. In Q4 alone, we evaluated nearly 100 potential vendor relationships and signed agreements to only 2 of them. Notably, in December, we launched our partnership with Fortinet, a global leader in cybersecurity and secured network solutions, serving enterprises. They also serve service providers, government customers worldwide.
Dale Foster: Thank you, Sean, good morning, everyone. 2025 was another exceptional year for Climb as we generated record results across all key financial metrics. These achievements reflect the continued execution of our teams that are driving organic growth by strengthening relationships with existing vendors and customers, selectively adding innovative technologies to our line card, and while driving and delivering operational efficiencies throughout our business. In Q4 alone, we evaluated nearly 100 potential vendor relationships and signed agreements to only 2 of them. Notably, in December, we launched our partnership with Fortinet, a global leader in cybersecurity and secured network solutions, serving enterprises. They also serve service providers, government customers worldwide.
Speaker #2: In the fourth quarter alone, we evaluated nearly 100 potential vendor relationships and signed agreements to only two of them. Notably, in December, we launched our partnership with Fortinet, a global leader in cybersecurity and securing secure network solutions serving enterprises.
Speaker #2: We also serve service providers, government customers worldwide. Fortinet has quickly become a primary onboarding focus and we expect to ramp them up quickly. And we'll become a meaningful contributor to both their business and Climb business.
Dale Foster: Fortinet is quickly becoming a primary onboarding focus, we expect to ramp them up quickly, and will become a meaningful contributor to both their business and Climb business. We look forward to building a long-term mutual beneficial relationship with Fortinet and their channel while delivering incremental value to our reseller network. While we focused most of our efforts in Q4 on onboarding Fortinet, there were other positive achievements from the alliance perspective. Q4 of 2025 was only the second full quarter since we kicked off our relationship with Darktrace. As a reminder, Darktrace is a cybersecurity company that uses self-learning AI to detect, investigate, and respond to cyber threats in real time across the entire organization's digital infrastructure.
Dale Foster: Fortinet is quickly becoming a primary onboarding focus, we expect to ramp them up quickly, and will become a meaningful contributor to both their business and Climb business. We look forward to building a long-term mutual beneficial relationship with Fortinet and their channel while delivering incremental value to our reseller network. While we focused most of our efforts in Q4 on onboarding Fortinet, there were other positive achievements from the alliance perspective. Q4 of 2025 was only the second full quarter since we kicked off our relationship with Darktrace. As a reminder, Darktrace is a cybersecurity company that uses self-learning AI to detect, investigate, and respond to cyber threats in real time across the entire organization's digital infrastructure.
Speaker #2: We look forward to building a long-term mutual beneficial relationship with Fortinet and their channel, while delivering incremental value to our reseller network. While we focus most of our efforts in Q4 on onboarding Fortinet, there were other positive achievements from the alliance perspective.
Speaker #2: The fourth quarter of 2025 was only the second full quarter since we kicked off our relationship with Darktrace. As a reminder, Darktrace is a cybersecurity company that uses self-learning AI to detect investigate and respond to cyber threats in real-time across the entire organization's digital infrastructure.
Speaker #2: In Q4, Climb had 70 partners transact over 13 million in Darktrace, product offerings with significantly more quoted pipeline ahead of us. We continue to work closely with the Darktrace team to expand partner enablement and drive broader adoption across our channel, positioning the relationship for sustained long-term growth.
Dale Foster: In Q4, Climb had 70 partners transact over $13 million in Darktrace product offerings, with significantly more quoted pipeline ahead of us. We continue to work closely with the Darktrace team to expand partner enablement and drive broader adoption across our channel, positioning the relationship for sustained long-term growth. In addition to strengthening our vendor portfolio, earlier this week, we announced the acquisition of interworks.cloud, a Greece-based specialist cloud distributor serving the Southeastern Europe reseller market, including Greece, Malta, Cyprus, and Bulgaria, and more. Interworks brings an established regional platform with over 600 cloud resellers and managed service providers, along with a curated vendor portfolio that includes Acronis, Google Workspace, AnyDesk, Blackwall, and most notably, Microsoft.
Dale Foster: In Q4, Climb had 70 partners transact over $13 million in Darktrace product offerings, with significantly more quoted pipeline ahead of us. We continue to work closely with the Darktrace team to expand partner enablement and drive broader adoption across our channel, positioning the relationship for sustained long-term growth. In addition to strengthening our vendor portfolio, earlier this week, we announced the acquisition of interworks.cloud, a Greece-based specialist cloud distributor serving the Southeastern Europe reseller market, including Greece, Malta, Cyprus, and Bulgaria, and more. Interworks brings an established regional platform with over 600 cloud resellers and managed service providers, along with a curated vendor portfolio that includes Acronis, Google Workspace, AnyDesk, Blackwall, and most notably, Microsoft.
Speaker #2: In addition to strengthening our vendor portfolio, early this week we announced the acquisition of Innoworks.cloud, a Greece-based specialist cloud distributor serving the southeastern Europe reseller market including Greece, Malta, Cyprus, and Bulgaria, and more.
Speaker #2: Innoworks brings an established regional platform with over 600 cloud resellers and managed service providers along with a curated vendor portfolio that includes Acronis, Google Workspace, AnyDesk, Blackwall, and most notably Microsoft.
Dale Foster: I've had the pleasure of working alongside the Interworks team for nearly a decade now. Over that time, we've developed a strong alignment in our culture, strategy, and partner focus. They bring an experienced management team, a well-established Microsoft CSP business, a multi-country footprint, and deep expertise in cloud marketplace and MSP-focused distribution. Together, these capabilities enhance our ability to drive cross-sell opportunities, deepen our engagement with our vendors and reseller partners, and further position Climb as a distributor of choice across the Southeastern Europe region. A critical component of this transaction is that we are bringing the full Interworks organization into Climb. This team will become part of our overall EMEA go-to-market structure.
Speaker #2: I've had the pleasure of working alongside the Innoworks team for nearly a decade now, and over that time we've developed a strong alignment in our culture, strategy, and partner focus.
Dale Foster: I've had the pleasure of working alongside the Interworks team for nearly a decade now. Over that time, we've developed a strong alignment in our culture, strategy, and partner focus. They bring an experienced management team, a well-established Microsoft CSP business, a multi-country footprint, and deep expertise in cloud marketplace and MSP-focused distribution. Together, these capabilities enhance our ability to drive cross-sell opportunities, deepen our engagement with our vendors and reseller partners, and further position Climb as a distributor of choice across the Southeastern Europe region. A critical component of this transaction is that we are bringing the full Interworks organization into Climb. This team will become part of our overall EMEA go-to-market structure.
Speaker #2: They bring an experienced management team, a well-established Microsoft CSP business, and a multicountry footprint and deep expertise in cloud marketplace and MSP-focused distribution. Together, these capabilities enhance our ability to drive cross-sell opportunities, deepen our engagement with our vendors, and reseller partners, and further position Climb as a distributor of choice across the southeastern Europe region.
Speaker #2: A critical component of this transaction is that we are bringing a full the full Innoworks organization into Climb, and this team will become part of our overall EMEA go-to-market structure.
Dale Foster: Maintaining the strength of their local leadership and partner relationships was a priority for us, and we believe continuity at the operational level will be essential in sustaining momentum in the region. At the same time, by integrating Interworks into our broader infrastructure, we can provide additional resources, scale, strategic investment to accelerate their growth. We expect the transaction to be immediately accretive to our earnings and Adjusted EBITDA, and look forward to the unlocking synergies and cross-selling opportunities as we integrate Interworks into our global platform in the coming months. Looking ahead, we remain focused on accelerating organic growth. At the same time, we have our internal development team building generative AI solutions to make our entire team more efficient. We will also continue to pursue accretive M&A opportunities that can strengthen our vendor portfolio and expand our geographic footprint.
Dale Foster: Maintaining the strength of their local leadership and partner relationships was a priority for us, and we believe continuity at the operational level will be essential in sustaining momentum in the region. At the same time, by integrating Interworks into our broader infrastructure, we can provide additional resources, scale, strategic investment to accelerate their growth. We expect the transaction to be immediately accretive to our earnings and Adjusted EBITDA, and look forward to the unlocking synergies and cross-selling opportunities as we integrate Interworks into our global platform in the coming months. Looking ahead, we remain focused on accelerating organic growth. At the same time, we have our internal development team building generative AI solutions to make our entire team more efficient. We will also continue to pursue accretive M&A opportunities that can strengthen our vendor portfolio and expand our geographic footprint.
Speaker #2: Maintaining the strength of their local leadership and partner relationships was a priority for us, and we believe continuity at the operational level will be essential in sustaining momentum in the region.
Speaker #2: At the same time, by integrating Innoworks into our broader infrastructure, we can provide additional resources, scale, strategic investment to accelerate their growth. We expect the transaction to be immediately accretive to our earnings and adjusted EBITDA and look forward to the unlocking synergies and cross-selling opportunities as we integrate Innoworks into our global platform in the coming months.
Speaker #2: Looking ahead, we remain focused on accelerating organic growth, and at the same time, we have our internal development team building generative AI solutions to make our entire team more efficient.
Speaker #2: We will also continue to pursue accretive M&A opportunities that can strengthen our vendor portfolio and expand our geographic footprint. We believe these initiatives coupled with our disciplined execution and strong balance sheet will enable us to deliver on our organic and inorganic growth objectives in 2026.
Dale Foster: We believe these initiatives, coupled with our disciplined execution and strong balance sheet, will enable us to deliver on our organic and inorganic growth objectives in 2026. With that, I will turn the call over to our CFO, Matt Sullivan, and he will take you through the financial results. Matt?
Dale Foster: We believe these initiatives, coupled with our disciplined execution and strong balance sheet, will enable us to deliver on our organic and inorganic growth objectives in 2026. With that, I will turn the call over to our CFO, Matt Sullivan, and he will take you through the financial results. Matt?
Speaker #2: With that, I will turn the call over to our CFO, Matt Sullivan, and he will take it through the financial results. Matt?
Speaker #3: Thank you, Dale, and good morning, everyone. A quick reminder as we review the financial results for our fourth quarter, all comparisons and variance commentary refer to the prior year quarter unless otherwise specified.
Matthew Sullivan: Thank you, Dale, and good morning, everyone. A quick reminder, as we review the financial results for our Q4, all comparisons and variance commentary refer to the prior year quarter, unless otherwise specified. As reported in our earnings press release, gross billings increased 3% to $625.4 million, compared to $605 million in the year ago quarter. Distribution segment gross billings increased 4% to $602.3 million, and solution segment gross billings remained flat at $23.1 million. Net sales in the Q4 2025 increased 20% to $193.8 million, compared to $161.8 million, which primarily reflects organic growth from new and existing vendors.
Matthew Sullivan: Thank you, Dale, and good morning, everyone. A quick reminder, as we review the financial results for our Q4, all comparisons and variance commentary refer to the prior year quarter, unless otherwise specified. As reported in our earnings press release, gross billings increased 3% to $625.4 million, compared to $605 million in the year ago quarter. Distribution segment gross billings increased 4% to $602.3 million, and solution segment gross billings remained flat at $23.1 million. Net sales in the Q4 2025 increased 20% to $193.8 million, compared to $161.8 million, which primarily reflects organic growth from new and existing vendors.
Speaker #3: As reported in our earnings press release, gross billings increased 3% to $625.4 million, compared to $605 million in the year-ago quarter. Distribution segment gross billings increased 4% to $602.3 million, and solution segment gross billings remained flat at 23.1 million.
Speaker #3: Net sales in the fourth quarter of 2025 increased 20% to $193.8 million, compared to $161.8 million, which primarily reflects organic growth from new and existing vendors.
Speaker #3: As we've mentioned in the past, the calculation of net sales is influenced by product mix and the respective adjustment to convert gross billings to net sales for financial reporting purposes under US GAAP.
Matthew Sullivan: As we've mentioned in the past, the calculation of net sales is influenced by product mix and the respective adjustment to convert gross billings to net sales for financial reporting purposes under U.S. GAAP. In Q4, we had an increase in sales of products that were recognized on a gross basis, and therefore leads to a smaller adjustment from gross billings to net sales. Gross profit in Q4 was $29.8 million, compared to $31.2 million. The decrease was primarily driven by a large vendor transaction in the year-ago period that carried a higher than average margin profile. Selling, general, and administrative expenses in Q4 2025 were $18.2 million, compared to $17.1 million in the year-ago period.
Matthew Sullivan: As we've mentioned in the past, the calculation of net sales is influenced by product mix and the respective adjustment to convert gross billings to net sales for financial reporting purposes under U.S. GAAP. In Q4, we had an increase in sales of products that were recognized on a gross basis, and therefore leads to a smaller adjustment from gross billings to net sales. Gross profit in Q4 was $29.8 million, compared to $31.2 million. The decrease was primarily driven by a large vendor transaction in the year-ago period that carried a higher than average margin profile. Selling, general, and administrative expenses in Q4 2025 were $18.2 million, compared to $17.1 million in the year-ago period.
Speaker #3: In the fourth quarter, we had an increase in sales of products that were recognized on a gross basis and therefore leads to a smaller adjustment from gross billings to net sales.
Speaker #3: Gross profit in the fourth quarter was $29.8 million, compared to $31.2 million. The decrease was primarily driven by a large vendor transaction in the year-ago period that carried a higher-than-average margin profile.
Speaker #3: Selling general and administrative expenses in the fourth quarter of 2025 were $18.2 million, compared to $17.1 million in the year-ago period. SG&A is a percentage of gross billings was 2.9% for the fourth quarter of 2025, compared to 2.8% in the year-ago period.
Matthew Sullivan: SG&A, as a percentage of Gross Billings, was 2.9% for Q4 2025, compared to 2.8% in the year-ago period. Net income in Q4 2025 remained flat at $7 million, or $1.52 per diluted share, compared to the prior year period. Adjusted net income was $7 million, or $1.53 per diluted share, compared to $10.3 million, or $2.26 per diluted share for the year-ago period. Adjusted EBITDA in Q4 2025 was $13 million, compared to $16.1 million for the same period in 2024.
Matthew Sullivan: SG&A, as a percentage of Gross Billings, was 2.9% for Q4 2025, compared to 2.8% in the year-ago period. Net income in Q4 2025 remained flat at $7 million, or $1.52 per diluted share, compared to the prior year period. Adjusted net income was $7 million, or $1.53 per diluted share, compared to $10.3 million, or $2.26 per diluted share for the year-ago period. Adjusted EBITDA in Q4 2025 was $13 million, compared to $16.1 million for the same period in 2024.
Speaker #3: Net income in the fourth quarter of 2025 remained flat at $7 million or $1.52 per diluted share, compared to the prior year period. Adjusted net income was $7 million, or $1.53 per diluted share, compared to $10.3 million, or $2.26 per diluted share for the year-ago period.
Speaker #3: Adjusted EBITDA in the fourth quarter of 2025 was $13 million, compared to $16.1 million for the same period in 2024. The decrease was primarily driven by a large vendor transaction in the year-ago period that carried a higher flow-through-to-adjusted EBITDA as sales compensation expense related to this transaction was paid through a contingent earnout.
Matthew Sullivan: The decrease was primarily driven by a large vendor transaction in the year ago period that carried a higher flow-through to Adjusted EBITDA, as sales compensation expense related to this transaction was paid through a contingent earn-out. That was included in the change in fair value of acquisition contingent consideration add back with an Adjusted EBITDA in the year ago period. Effective Margin, which is defined as Adjusted EBITDA as a percentage of gross profit, was 43.6%, compared to 51.5% for the same period in 2024. Turning to our balance sheet, cash and cash equivalents were $36.6 million as of 31 December 2025, compared to $29.8 million on 31 December 2024, while working capital increased by $27.7 million during this period. The increase was primarily attributed to the timing of receivable collections and payables.
Matthew Sullivan: The decrease was primarily driven by a large vendor transaction in the year ago period that carried a higher flow-through to Adjusted EBITDA, as sales compensation expense related to this transaction was paid through a contingent earn-out. That was included in the change in fair value of acquisition contingent consideration add back with an Adjusted EBITDA in the year ago period. Effective Margin, which is defined as Adjusted EBITDA as a percentage of gross profit, was 43.6%, compared to 51.5% for the same period in 2024. Turning to our balance sheet, cash and cash equivalents were $36.6 million as of 31 December 2025, compared to $29.8 million on 31 December 2024, while working capital increased by $27.7 million during this period. The increase was primarily attributed to the timing of receivable collections and payables.
Speaker #3: And that was included in the change in fair value of acquisition contingent consideration add-back with an adjusted EBITDA in the year-ago period. Effective margin which is defined as adjusted EBITDA as a percentage of gross profit was 43.6%, compared to 51.5% for the same period in 2024.
Speaker #3: Turning to our balance sheet, cash and cash equivalents were $36.6 million as of December 31, 2025, compared to $29.8 million, on December 31, 2024.
Speaker #3: While working capital increased by $27.7 million during this period. The increase was primarily attributed to the timing of receivable collections and payables. As of December 31, we had $200,000 of outstanding debt with no borrowings outstanding under our $50 million revolving credit facility.
Matthew Sullivan: As of 31 December, we had $200,000 of outstanding debt, with no borrowings outstanding under our $50 million revolving credit facility. Consistent with our capital allocation priorities, the board has determined to suspend our quarterly cash dividend beginning in Q1 2026. This decision allows us to retain additional capital to support organic growth initiatives and strategic acquisitions, while further strengthening our financial flexibility. Based on the company's strong return on equity, the company plans to reinvest the capital for higher growth initiatives. Looking ahead, our strong liquidity position provides us with the flexibility to pursue both organic and inorganic growth opportunities, while expanding our relationships with vendors and customers worldwide. We will continue to be active on the M&A front as we evaluate accretive targets that can strengthen our vendor profile and expand our geographic footprint.
Matthew Sullivan: As of 31 December, we had $200,000 of outstanding debt, with no borrowings outstanding under our $50 million revolving credit facility. Consistent with our capital allocation priorities, the board has determined to suspend our quarterly cash dividend beginning in Q1 2026. This decision allows us to retain additional capital to support organic growth initiatives and strategic acquisitions, while further strengthening our financial flexibility. Based on the company's strong return on equity, the company plans to reinvest the capital for higher growth initiatives. Looking ahead, our strong liquidity position provides us with the flexibility to pursue both organic and inorganic growth opportunities, while expanding our relationships with vendors and customers worldwide. We will continue to be active on the M&A front as we evaluate accretive targets that can strengthen our vendor profile and expand our geographic footprint.
Speaker #3: Consistent with our capital allocation priorities, the board has determined to suspend our quarterly cash dividend beginning in the first quarter of 2026. This decision allows us to retain additional capital to support organic growth initiatives and strategic acquisitions while further strengthening our financial flexibility.
Speaker #3: Based on the company's strong return on equity, the company plans to reinvest the capital for higher growth initiatives. Looking ahead, our strong liquidity position provides us with the flexibility to pursue both organic and inorganic growth opportunities while expanding our relationships with vendors and customers worldwide.
Speaker #3: We will continue to be active on the M&A front as we evaluate accretive targets that can strengthen our vendor profile and expand our geographic footprint.
Speaker #3: With a disciplined approach to expansion and a continued focus on execution, we believe we are well positioned to deliver another year of growth and enhanced profitability in 2026.
Matthew Sullivan: With a disciplined approach to expansion and a continued focus on execution, we believe we are well-positioned to deliver another year of growth and enhanced profitability in 2026. Dale, back to you.
Matthew Sullivan: With a disciplined approach to expansion and a continued focus on execution, we believe we are well-positioned to deliver another year of growth and enhanced profitability in 2026. Dale, back to you.
Speaker #3: Dale, back to you.
Speaker #4: Yeah, thanks, Matt. And before we open this up for questions, I'd like to address a couple of points. Some of them, they've just come up over the last couple of days when everybody's seen some of the AI disruption in the market.
Dale Foster: Yeah, thanks, Matt. You know, before we open this up for questions, I'd like to address a couple points that, you know, some of them that just come up over the last couple days when everybody's seen, you know, some of the AI disruption in the market. First, you know, on the dividend, it's a thoughtful decision made by our board and one that I fully support. As we evaluate the opportunities in front of us, we believe the best way to drive long-term shareholder value at this stage is through discipline and capital allocation and strategic reinvestments in the business.
Dale Foster: Yeah, thanks, Matt. You know, before we open this up for questions, I'd like to address a couple points that, you know, some of them that just come up over the last couple days when everybody's seen, you know, some of the AI disruption in the market. First, you know, on the dividend, it's a thoughtful decision made by our board and one that I fully support. As we evaluate the opportunities in front of us, we believe the best way to drive long-term shareholder value at this stage is through discipline and capital allocation and strategic reinvestments in the business.
Speaker #4: First, on the dividend, it's awful decision made by our board and one that I fully support. As we evaluate the opportunities in front of us, we believe the best way to drive long-term fair value at this stage is through disciplined capital allocation and strategic reinvestments in the business.
Dale Foster: We operate in an ecosystem where many of our customers and vendors are backed by private equity firms, which has provided us a kind of a unique perspective on how successful operators deploy capital and accelerate growth, and also enhance the returns with their portfolio companies. We intend to take a similar tactic at Climb, and candidly, we've already begun to do so in the way of our now six acquisitions in the last six years with the addition of Interworks.cloud. With a strong balance sheet and liquidity position, our priority is to allocate capital toward initiatives that improve operational efficiency and strengthen our competitive position.
Speaker #4: We operate in an ecosystem where many of our customers and vendors are backed by private equity firms. Which has provided us kind of a unique perspective on how successful operators deploy capital and accelerate growth.
Dale Foster: We operate in an ecosystem where many of our customers and vendors are backed by private equity firms, which has provided us a kind of a unique perspective on how successful operators deploy capital and accelerate growth, and also enhance the returns with their portfolio companies. We intend to take a similar tactic at Climb, and candidly, we've already begun to do so in the way of our now six acquisitions in the last six years with the addition of Interworks.cloud. With a strong balance sheet and liquidity position, our priority is to allocate capital toward initiatives that improve operational efficiency and strengthen our competitive position.
Speaker #4: And also enhance the returns with their portfolio companies. We intend to take a similar tactic at Climb and candidly, we've already begun to do so in the way of our now sixth acquisitions in the last six years with the addition of Innoworks.cloud.
Speaker #4: With a strong balance sheet and liquidity position, our priority is to allocate capital toward initiatives that improve operational efficiency and strengthen our competitive position.
Speaker #4: That includes continuing to streamline processes, leveraging AI and automation tools where appropriate, utilizing prudent leverage when it enhances our returns, and pursuing strategic acquisitions in our ecosystem that align with our go-to-market strategy.
Dale Foster: That includes continuing to streamline processes, leveraging AI and automation tools where appropriate, utilizing, you know, prudent leverage when enhances our returns, and pursuing strategic acquisitions in our ecosystem that align with our go-to-market strategy. We believe all this will create, you know, long-term shareholder value for our shareholders. The second point, you know, over the last couple days on the AI disruption. You know, these are the disruption of AI engines and large language models, large language models or LLMs, that have come into our market. More specific, you know, they're gonna interface with or take out SaaS vendors we currently are carrying or prospecting. I've been around a long time in this business and remember a similar talk track about, around the cloud.
Dale Foster: That includes continuing to streamline processes, leveraging AI and automation tools where appropriate, utilizing, you know, prudent leverage when enhances our returns, and pursuing strategic acquisitions in our ecosystem that align with our go-to-market strategy. We believe all this will create, you know, long-term shareholder value for our shareholders. The second point, you know, over the last couple days on the AI disruption. You know, these are the disruption of AI engines and large language models, large language models or LLMs, that have come into our market. More specific, you know, they're gonna interface with or take out SaaS vendors we currently are carrying or prospecting. I've been around a long time in this business and remember a similar talk track about, around the cloud.
Speaker #4: And we believe all this will create long-term shareholder value for our shareholders. The second point, which is over the last couple of days, is on the AI disruption. These are the disruptions of AI engines and large language models, large language models, or LLMs.
Speaker #4: That have come into our market, and more specifically, they're going to interface with or take out SaaS vendors we currently are carrying or prospecting.
Speaker #4: So I've been around a long time in this business and remember a similar talk track around the cloud. I had to do a lookup.
Dale Foster: I had to do a lookup, but AWS announced in 2006 that cloud was open for business. That was 20 years ago. Just 20 years later, and it was just last year, that cloud workloads, there were workloads and storage in the cloud, just passed the 50% threshold, you know, versus on-prem or, you know, private clouds or private on-prem environments. The real-world environment today for cloud is really a hybrid one. Do I believe or yes, believe that, you know, AI will move much faster than 20 years? Is there an adoption rate? For sure, that's gonna happen. We still believe it's gonna be more of a hybrid environment, just like cloud is. I think it's 98% hybrid right now.
Dale Foster: I had to do a lookup, but AWS announced in 2006 that cloud was open for business. That was 20 years ago. Just 20 years later, and it was just last year, that cloud workloads, there were workloads and storage in the cloud, just passed the 50% threshold, you know, versus on-prem or, you know, private clouds or private on-prem environments. The real-world environment today for cloud is really a hybrid one. Do I believe or yes, believe that, you know, AI will move much faster than 20 years? Is there an adoption rate? For sure, that's gonna happen. We still believe it's gonna be more of a hybrid environment, just like cloud is. I think it's 98% hybrid right now.
Speaker #4: AWS announced in 2006 that cloud was open for business. That was 20 years ago. And just 20 years later, and it was just last year, that cloud workloads that were workloads and storage in the cloud just passed the 50% threshold versus on-prem or private clouds or private on-prem environments.
Speaker #4: So the real-world environment today for cloud is really a hybrid one. Do I believe or yes, that AI will move much faster than 20 years for is there an adoption rate?
Speaker #4: For sure, that's going to happen. But we still believe it's going to be more of a hybrid environment just like cloud is, I think, is 98% hybrid right now.
Dale Foster: The AI environment, you know, will be a hybrid one. While we are very small and we're a very nimble company in our market, you know, we are still connecting technology builders with users. We can pivot quickly, as we have done, over these last 8 years. As the market moves, we will move and move at that same speed. Whether we have a standalone AI systems, AI agents, hybrid SaaS that's out there, or Platform-as-a-Service, you know, we will be selling emerging technology products that solve real-world problems. Regardless of the computing environment, we believe we will have a place as that connector of technology. This concludes our remarks, and we'll take it to the operator for questions.
Speaker #4: So the AI environment will be a hybrid one. While we are very small and we're a very nimble company in our market, we are still connecting technology builders with users.
Dale Foster: The AI environment, you know, will be a hybrid one. While we are very small and we're a very nimble company in our market, you know, we are still connecting technology builders with users. We can pivot quickly, as we have done, over these last 8 years. As the market moves, we will move and move at that same speed. Whether we have a standalone AI systems, AI agents, hybrid SaaS that's out there, or Platform-as-a-Service, you know, we will be selling emerging technology products that solve real-world problems. Regardless of the computing environment, we believe we will have a place as that connector of technology. This concludes our remarks, and we'll take it to the operator for questions.
Speaker #4: We can pivot quickly as we have done over these last eight years. As the market moves, we will move and move at that same speed.
Speaker #4: And whether we have a standalone AI systems, AI agents, hybrid SaaS that's out there, or platform as a service, we will be selling emerging technology products that solve real-world problems.
Speaker #4: And regardless of the computing environment, we believe we will have a place as that connector of technology. And this concludes our remarks and we'll take it to the operator for questions.
Sean Mansouri: Thank you. If you'd like to ask a question, press star one on your keypad. To leave the queue at any time, press star two. Once again, that is star and one if you would like to ask a question. We'll take our first question from Keith Housum with Northcoast Research. Please go ahead. Your line is now open.
Operator: Thank you. If you'd like to ask a question, press star one on your keypad. To leave the queue at any time, press star two. Once again, that is star and one if you would like to ask a question. We'll take our first question from Keith Housum with Northcoast Research. Please go ahead. Your line is now open.
Speaker #1: Thank you. If you'd like to ask a question, press star one on your keypad. To leave the queue at any time, press star two.
Speaker #1: Once again, that is star and one if you would like to ask a question. And we'll take our first question from Keith Hoseman with North Coast Research.
Speaker #1: Please go ahead. Your line is now open.
Speaker #5: Good morning, guys. Appreciate it. Congratulations on the acquisition here. Just looking at that large acquisition that happened the prior year, can you guys just give any scope in terms of how big that was in terms of if we want to kind of think about what year-over-year performance was without that?
[Analyst] (Aiera): Good morning, guys. Appreciate it. Congratulations on the acquisition here. you know, just looking at that large acquisition that happened the prior year, can you guys just give us any scope in terms of how big that was, in terms of we wanna kind of think about what the year-over-year performance was without that? any way that we kind of scale it out?
Keith Housum: Good morning, guys. Appreciate it. Congratulations on the acquisition here. you know, just looking at that large acquisition that happened the prior year, can you guys just give us any scope in terms of how big that was, in terms of we wanna kind of think about what the year-over-year performance was without that? any way that we kind of scale it out?
Speaker #5: Any way to be kind of scale it out?
Matthew Sullivan: Yeah. We talked a bit about it last quarter, and thanks, Keith, for joining and calling and dialing in. When you remove that large transaction in Q4 of last year, our recurring and organic growth still was in the high teens for Q4 compared to Q4 of last year.
Matthew Sullivan: Yeah. We talked a bit about it last quarter, and thanks, Keith, for joining and calling and dialing in. When you remove that large transaction in Q4 of last year, our recurring and organic growth still was in the high teens for Q4 compared to Q4 of last year.
Speaker #4: Yeah. So we talked a bit about it last quarter. And thanks, Keith, for joining and calling and dialing in. When you remove that large transaction in Q4 of last year, our recurring and organic growth still was in the high teens.
Speaker #4: For Q4 compared to Q4 of last year.
Speaker #5: Great. And that's both on a gross billings as well as EBITDA basis?
[Analyst] (Aiera): Great. That's both on a gross billings as well as EBITDA basis?
Keith Housum: Great. That's both on a gross billings as well as EBITDA basis?
Speaker #4: Correct. Yes.
Matthew Sullivan: Correct, yes.
Matthew Sullivan: Correct, yes.
Speaker #5: Great. Appreciate that. And then you guys I think it was early last year announced the departure of Citrix. And can you talk a little bit about the impact that had in the quarter?
[Analyst] (Aiera): Great. Appreciate that. Then you guys, you know, I think it was early last year, announced, you know, the departure of Citrix. Can you talk a little bit about, you know, the impact that had on the quarter, or you guys have been able to completely offset that loss with, you know, other vendors?
Keith Housum: Great. Appreciate that. Then you guys, you know, I think it was early last year, announced, you know, the departure of Citrix. Can you talk a little bit about, you know, the impact that had on the quarter, or you guys have been able to completely offset that loss with, you know, other vendors?
Speaker #5: Have you guys been able to completely offset that loss with other vendors?
Speaker #4: Yeah. I'll speak up quickly. So we still had input from Citrix and we still have it through 2029 at some residual stuff because of the nature of some of the agreements.
Dale Foster: Yeah, I'll take that quickly. We still had, you know, input from Citrix, and we still have it through 2029. It's some residual stuff because of the nature of some of the agreements that go out with our customers, you know, that's a year-over-year recurring. We had impact, not as impactful in Q1 of 2025, the rest of the year, we looked at as a $50 to $60 million hole. If we, you know, I was at our FKO over in the UK, and our team still, with that big hole, grew at 3%. They made that entire $60 million up in the last three quarters, which is a testament to, number one, picking up new vendors.
Dale Foster: Yeah, I'll take that quickly. We still had, you know, input from Citrix, and we still have it through 2029. It's some residual stuff because of the nature of some of the agreements that go out with our customers, you know, that's a year-over-year recurring. We had impact, not as impactful in Q1 of 2025, the rest of the year, we looked at as a $50 to $60 million hole. If we, you know, I was at our FKO over in the UK, and our team still, with that big hole, grew at 3%. They made that entire $60 million up in the last three quarters, which is a testament to, number one, picking up new vendors.
Speaker #4: They go out with our customers that's a year-over-year recurring. But so we had impact not as impactful in Q1 of 2025, but then the rest of the year, we looked at it as a 50 to 60 million dollar hole.
Speaker #4: And if I was at our SKO over in the UK, and our team still with that big hole grew at 3%. So they made that entire 60 million dollars up in the last three quarters which is a testament to, number one, picking up new vendors they picked up vendors that we have on the US side.
Dale Foster: They picked up vendors that we have on the US side. Like I said, we've continued to say that we're signing global contracts now. It's the choice of the sales teams in their regions of what they want to sell, and some of them are pushed on them, other ones are, you know, that they're prospecting on their own. The team did an incredible job. I mean, we kept... Like I love to say, Keith, is that, you know, we're salespeople. We'll take the next product and take it out to market, and, you know, they filled that pretty quickly and expanded some relationships with vendors that actually compete with Citrix, and we took some of that over back that we lost.
Dale Foster: They picked up vendors that we have on the US side. Like I said, we've continued to say that we're signing global contracts now. It's the choice of the sales teams in their regions of what they want to sell, and some of them are pushed on them, other ones are, you know, that they're prospecting on their own. The team did an incredible job. I mean, we kept... Like I love to say, Keith, is that, you know, we're salespeople. We'll take the next product and take it out to market, and, you know, they filled that pretty quickly and expanded some relationships with vendors that actually compete with Citrix, and we took some of that over back that we lost.
Speaker #4: Like I said, and we've continued to say that we're signing global contracts now. So it's the choice of the sales teams in their regions of what they want to sell.
Speaker #4: And some of them are pushed on them. Other ones are that they're prospecting on their own. So the team did an incredible job. I mean, we kept, and like I love to say, Keith, is that we're salespeople.
Speaker #4: We'll take the next product and take it out to market. And they filled that pretty quickly. And expanded some relationships with vendors that actually compete with Citrix.
Speaker #4: And we took some of that over back that we lost.
Speaker #5: Great. Impressive. Appreciate that. Turning over to the Intelworks acquisition here. The 86% growth in EBITDA year-over-year, how should we think about going forward? The go forward run rate or the starting point?
[Analyst] (Aiera): Great. Impressive. Appreciate that. Turning over to the Interworks acquisition here. The 86% growth in EBITDA year-over-year, how should we think about going forward, like the go-forward run rate or the starting point? I mean, was there anything unique in that 86% or, you know, is that roughly $1 million in EBITDA a good starting point for those guys?
Keith Housum: Great. Impressive. Appreciate that. Turning over to the Interworks acquisition here. The 86% growth in EBITDA year-over-year, how should we think about going forward, like the go-forward run rate or the starting point? I mean, was there anything unique in that 86% or, you know, is that roughly $1 million in EBITDA a good starting point for those guys?
Speaker #5: I mean, was there any unique in that 86% or is that roughly a million dollars in EBITDA a good starting point for those guys?
Speaker #4: Yeah. That's a good starting point for them. But if there's a couple of things that we didn't get into detail on the call, but so Microsoft came up and said, "Hey, we're going to consolidate our distribution worldwide." And they set a threshold.
Dale Foster: Yeah, that's a good starting point for them. there's a couple things that, you know, we didn't get into detail on the call. Microsoft came up and said, Hey, we're gonna consolidate our distribution worldwide, and they set a threshold. there was a lot of scrambling over the last 14 months that said, If you don't meet this threshold, you'll lose your distribution agreement with Microsoft. both us and InterWorks Cloud, we're in that same position on our Climb side. we wanted to keep that relationship because we believe, you know, Microsoft is a tier one, but it's also where people want to go. there's 2 reasons. Number one, we were combined as a company, we get to that $30 million threshold with Microsoft.
Dale Foster: Yeah, that's a good starting point for them. there's a couple things that, you know, we didn't get into detail on the call. Microsoft came up and said, Hey, we're gonna consolidate our distribution worldwide, and they set a threshold. there was a lot of scrambling over the last 14 months that said, If you don't meet this threshold, you'll lose your distribution agreement with Microsoft. both us and InterWorks Cloud, we're in that same position on our Climb side. we wanted to keep that relationship because we believe, you know, Microsoft is a tier one, but it's also where people want to go. there's 2 reasons. Number one, we were combined as a company, we get to that $30 million threshold with Microsoft.
Speaker #4: So there was a lot of scrambling over the last 14 months that said, "If you don't meet this threshold, you'll lose your distribution agreement with Microsoft." And both us and Intelworks Cloud were in that same position on our climb side.
Speaker #4: And we wanted to keep that relationship because we believe Microsoft is a tier one, but it's also where people want to go. And so there's two reasons.
Speaker #4: Number one, we were to combine as a company. We get to that $30 million threshold with Microsoft. Number two, we are moving into a cloud environment.
Dale Foster: Number two, you know, we're moving into a cloud environment, and we've talked about it for a while, and, you know, I'm gonna have our CPC event with all of our top customers and vendors next week. You know, I'm gonna have a slide just on our failures, and one of the failures we've had is we haven't been able to get to our 2.0 of Expedition of a cloud marketplace or platform. Well, Interworks is already there. They're transacting in a very, you know, eloquent way with their customers, almost like a self-service, and they do a lot with MSPs, hybrid VARs, that we do this as well, but not as quickly as they do. It's gonna be a learning curve in the DNA transfer between the two companies.
Dale Foster: Number two, you know, we're moving into a cloud environment, and we've talked about it for a while, and, you know, I'm gonna have our CPC event with all of our top customers and vendors next week. You know, I'm gonna have a slide just on our failures, and one of the failures we've had is we haven't been able to get to our 2.0 of Expedition of a cloud marketplace or platform. Well, Interworks is already there. They're transacting in a very, you know, eloquent way with their customers, almost like a self-service, and they do a lot with MSPs, hybrid VARs, that we do this as well, but not as quickly as they do. It's gonna be a learning curve in the DNA transfer between the two companies.
Speaker #4: And we've talked about it for a while. And I'm going to have our CPC event with all of our top customers and vendors next week.
Speaker #4: But I'm going to have a slide just on our failures. And one of the failures we've had is we haven't been able to get to our 2.0 of expedition of a cloud marketplace or platform.
Speaker #4: Well, Intelworks is already there. They're transacting in a very eloquent way with their customers, almost like a self-service. And they do a lot with MSPs, hybrid VARs that we do this as well, but not as quickly as they do.
Speaker #4: So it's going to be a learning curve. And the DNA transfer between the two companies their parent company that we acquired them from is called Infoterra, which is the platform that we both use.
Dale Foster: Their parent company that we acquired them from is called Infoterra, which is the platform that we both use, and actually, all of our locations use that platform. We see more and more of our vendors going onto the platform and marketplace, the great team will help us and educate our teams on the US side and the Europe side.
Dale Foster: Their parent company that we acquired them from is called Infoterra, which is the platform that we both use, and actually, all of our locations use that platform. We see more and more of our vendors going onto the platform and marketplace, the great team will help us and educate our teams on the US side and the Europe side.
Speaker #4: And actually, all of our locations use that platform. So we see more and more of our vendors going onto the platform and marketplace. And the Greek team will help us and educate our teams on the US side and the Europe side.
[Analyst] (Aiera): Great, I appreciate that. I guess final question for me before I turn it over. The working capital increase and the timing of collections, is that already been worked through, or how should we think about that going forward?
Keith Housum: Great, I appreciate that. I guess final question for me before I turn it over. The working capital increase and the timing of collections, is that already been worked through, or how should we think about that going forward?
Speaker #5: Great. I appreciate that. And then I guess final question for me before I turn it over. The working capital increase and the timing of collections, is that already then worked through?
Speaker #5: Or how should we think about that going forward?
Speaker #4: Yeah. So that's a normal it's a usual timing difference. So with the large transaction at the end of last year, those receivables and payables have already been collected during 2025.
Matthew Sullivan: Yeah, that's a usual timing difference. With the large transaction at the end of last year, those receivables and payables have already been collected during 2025, and then it's been worked through here in early 2026.
Matthew Sullivan: Yeah, that's a usual timing difference. With the large transaction at the end of last year, those receivables and payables have already been collected during 2025, and then it's been worked through here in early 2026.
Speaker #4: And then it's been worked through here in early 2026.
Speaker #5: Great. Thanks. I'll turn it back over.
[Analyst] (Aiera): Great, thanks. I'll turn it back over.
Keith Housum: Great, thanks. I'll turn it back over.
Speaker #1: Thank you. We'll take our next question from Vincent Kaleucho. With Barrington Research, please go ahead. Your line is open.
Sean Mansouri: Thank you.
Sean Mansouri: Thank you.
Matthew Sullivan: Thank you.
Operator: Thank you.
Sean Mansouri: I'll take our next question from Vincent Colicchio with Barrington Research. Please go ahead, your line is open.
Operator: I'll take our next question from Vincent Colicchio with Barrington Research. Please go ahead, your line is open.
Keith Housum: Yeah, Dale, congrats on beating the expectations this quarter. Was your growth broad-based across your top 20 on an organic basis, and were there any lumpy deals in the quarter?
Vincent Colicchio: Yeah, Dale, congrats on beating the expectations this quarter. Was your growth broad-based across your top 20 on an organic basis, and were there any lumpy deals in the quarter?
Speaker #6: Yeah. Dell, congrats on beating the expectations this quarter. Was your growth broad-based across your top 20? And on an organic basis? And were there any lumpy deals in the quarter?
Dale Foster: Thanks, Vince. Good to talk to you. No lumpy deals in the quarter like we had before, 2024 in Q4, but it was across our vendors, the ones I talked about. You know, our Darktrace continues to rise up. You know, we talked about our top two vendors, Sophos and SolarWinds. SolarWinds, you know, I think we talked about in the last release, acquired by Turn Capital, or Turn River. There was some disruption as they went through their pricing model changes, but we actually, you know, finished really strong with SolarWinds as they've gotten through some of their pricing structure and their go-to-market. Other than that, it's the top 20 make the biggest impact, and it's been very stable.
Speaker #4: So thanks, Vince. Good to talk to you. So no lumpy deals in the quarter like we had before, 2024 and Q4. But it was across our vendors.
Dale Foster: Thanks, Vince. Good to talk to you. No lumpy deals in the quarter like we had before, 2024 in Q4, but it was across our vendors, the ones I talked about. You know, our Darktrace continues to rise up. You know, we talked about our top two vendors, Sophos and SolarWinds. SolarWinds, you know, I think we talked about in the last release, acquired by Turn Capital, or Turn River. There was some disruption as they went through their pricing model changes, but we actually, you know, finished really strong with SolarWinds as they've gotten through some of their pricing structure and their go-to-market. Other than that, it's the top 20 make the biggest impact, and it's been very stable.
Speaker #4: The ones I talked about, our dark trace continues to rise up. We talked about our top two vendors, Sophos and SolarWinds. SolarWinds, I think we talked about in the last release, they acquired by Turn Capital.
Speaker #4: Or Turn River. And so there was some disruption as they went through their pricing model changes. But we actually finished really strong with SolarWinds as they've gotten through some of their pricing structure and their go-to-market.
Speaker #4: But other than that, it's the top 20 make that biggest impact. And it's been very stable.
Speaker #6: And has the revenue momentum that you've seen in the quarter carried through in '26?
Keith Housum: Has the revenue momentum that you've seen in the quarter carried through in 2026?
Vincent Colicchio: Has the revenue momentum that you've seen in the quarter carried through in 2026?
Dale Foster: Well, you know, you're always gonna see Q4, and it's always been this way with us, is always our biggest quarter because people, you know, going back to, you know, we have our reoccurring revenue with our annual subscription. Q4 has always been large, so it'll continue to be large because that's when the renewals come up. We know we do, you know, the Douglas Stewart acquisition, and you'll see a rebranding kickoff next week for all the Climb stuff on the SLED and education side. You know, they typically have a down quarter in Q1 that we experienced last year, you know, because it's just flat, and then all the buying picks up for that. Other than that, it's pretty cyclical like it has been for the last, you know, five, six years.
Dale Foster: Well, you know, you're always gonna see Q4, and it's always been this way with us, is always our biggest quarter because people, you know, going back to, you know, we have our reoccurring revenue with our annual subscription. Q4 has always been large, so it'll continue to be large because that's when the renewals come up. We know we do, you know, the Douglas Stewart acquisition, and you'll see a rebranding kickoff next week for all the Climb stuff on the SLED and education side. You know, they typically have a down quarter in Q1 that we experienced last year, you know, because it's just flat, and then all the buying picks up for that. Other than that, it's pretty cyclical like it has been for the last, you know, five, six years.
Speaker #4: Well, you're always going to see Q4. And it's always been this way with us. It's always our biggest quarter because people going back to we have a reoccurring revenue with our annual subscription.
Speaker #4: So Q4 has always been large. So it'll continue to be large because that's when the renewals come up. We do the Douglas Stewart acquisition.
Speaker #4: And you'll see a rebranding kick off next week for all the climb stuff on the sled and education side. But they typically have a down quarter in Q1 that we experienced last year.
Speaker #4: Because it's just flat. And then all the buying picks up for that. But other than that, it's pretty cyclical like it has been for the last five, six years.
Keith Housum: On the AI side, have you identified the use cases for internal use? Are you at that stage?
Speaker #6: On the AI side, have you identified use cases for internal use? Are you at that stage?
Vincent Colicchio: On the AI side, have you identified the use cases for internal use? Are you at that stage?
Speaker #4: We have. So the Shaw, our new CIO, has been on board now for seven, eight months. He is the most popular person in our company because everybody's looking to him to solve efficiency issues, right?
Dale Foster: We have, you know, so Vishal, our new CIO, has been on board now for 7, 8 months. He is the most popular person in our company because everybody's looking to him to solve efficiency issues, right? You know, he is front and center at our sales kickoffs. We have a tech guy, you know, kicking off and people are asking, it becomes, you know, quite the entertainment, having our CIO be the center of attention, which is great because we're just solving so many internal things that we need to work on. You know, we went live with our ERP almost 2 years ago, and now it's how to make that more efficient, what AI tools. If you look at Vishal's background, right?
Dale Foster: We have, you know, so Vishal, our new CIO, has been on board now for 7, 8 months. He is the most popular person in our company because everybody's looking to him to solve efficiency issues, right? You know, he is front and center at our sales kickoffs. We have a tech guy, you know, kicking off and people are asking, it becomes, you know, quite the entertainment, having our CIO be the center of attention, which is great because we're just solving so many internal things that we need to work on. You know, we went live with our ERP almost 2 years ago, and now it's how to make that more efficient, what AI tools. If you look at Vishal's background, right?
Speaker #4: And we've he is front and center at our sales kickoffs. So we have a tech guy kicking off. And people are asking and it becomes quite the entertainment having our CIO be the center of attention, which is great because we're just solving so many internal things that we need to work on.
Speaker #4: We went live with our ERP almost two years ago. And now it's how to make that more efficient. What AI tools? And if you look at Vishal's background, right?
Dale Foster: He came from WWT, which is a $30 billion reseller, one of our customers, one we have great relationships with. He's already gone through a lot of this, you know, because of the, you know, they had the dollars to really spend on this and adopt it early. He's really running kind of the same plan that he had at WWT. He sees what needs to be done, and it's how fast we can implement it. We've done a couple things. We have a bigger implementation and development team inside of Climb. We have outsourced some of the smaller connector products, you know, projects that we have, whether it's EDI, XML, or you know, APIs. Everything's moving faster, and he's identified so many different efficiencies because we still...
Speaker #4: So he came from WWT, which is a $30 billion reseller, one of our customers, one we have great relationships with. But he's already gone through a lot of this because of the they had the dollars to really spend on this and adopt it early.
Dale Foster: He came from WWT, which is a $30 billion reseller, one of our customers, one we have great relationships with. He's already gone through a lot of this, you know, because of the, you know, they had the dollars to really spend on this and adopt it early. He's really running kind of the same plan that he had at WWT. He sees what needs to be done, and it's how fast we can implement it. We've done a couple things. We have a bigger implementation and development team inside of Climb. We have outsourced some of the smaller connector products, you know, projects that we have, whether it's EDI, XML, or you know, APIs. Everything's moving faster, and he's identified so many different efficiencies because we still...
Speaker #4: So he's really running kind of the same plan that he had at WWT. So he sees what needs to be done, and it's how fast we can implement it.
Speaker #4: So we've done a couple of things. We have a bigger implementation and development team inside of Climb. We have outsourced some of the smaller connector products, projects that we have, whether it's EDI or XML or APIs.
Speaker #4: So everything's moving faster. And he's identified so many different efficiencies because we still and what I like to say is we're the fastest of the turtles.
Dale Foster: What I like to say is, you know, we're the fastest of the turtles. If you look at distribution has been done, what we've been doing for 30 years. You know, all we're doing is moving a license key from a vendor all the way to a user, and our goal is to do that much faster. We're still doing things that we did, you know, 15, 20 years ago. Vishal's saying, Hey, we can do this much, much quicker and without the expense of the labor that we have right now.
Dale Foster: What I like to say is, you know, we're the fastest of the turtles. If you look at distribution has been done, what we've been doing for 30 years. You know, all we're doing is moving a license key from a vendor all the way to a user, and our goal is to do that much faster. We're still doing things that we did, you know, 15, 20 years ago. Vishal's saying, Hey, we can do this much, much quicker and without the expense of the labor that we have right now.
Speaker #4: So if you look at distribution has been done what we've been doing for 30 years. All we're doing is moving a license key from a vendor all the way to a user.
Speaker #4: And our goal is to do that much faster. But we're still doing things that we did 15, 20 years ago. So Vishal's saying, "Hey, we can do this much quicker." And without the expense of the labor that we have right now.
Keith Housum: What is the timeline for when Interworks can provide cross-selling synergies?
Vincent Colicchio: What is the timeline for when Interworks can provide cross-selling synergies?
Speaker #6: What is the timeline for when IntoWorks can provide cross-selling synergies?
Dale Foster: Our teams, you know, because we have the Microsoft distribution agreement already, and Microsoft is well aware of ahead of time with confidentiality of the agreements, you know, we have it for all the EU countries. We are gonna, you know, if you take a look at it, just from a, just a mental geographic look, you know, here we have, you know, the UK and Ireland that we're very strong in, and now we have Southeastern or Southwestern Europe, Southeastern Europe. Between those two, we have, you know, you know, 20 countries in between there that we're gonna attack with that Microsoft agreement, and then all of the cottage industry products that go with that.
Speaker #4: So our teams, because we have the Microsoft distribution agreement already, and Microsoft is well aware of ahead of time with confidentiality of the agreements, we have it for all the EU countries.
Dale Foster: Our teams, you know, because we have the Microsoft distribution agreement already, and Microsoft is well aware of ahead of time with confidentiality of the agreements, you know, we have it for all the EU countries. We are gonna, you know, if you take a look at it, just from a, just a mental geographic look, you know, here we have, you know, the UK and Ireland that we're very strong in, and now we have Southeastern or Southwestern Europe, Southeastern Europe. Between those two, we have, you know, you know, 20 countries in between there that we're gonna attack with that Microsoft agreement, and then all of the cottage industry products that go with that.
Speaker #4: So we are going to if you take a look at it just from a mental geographic look, here we have the UK and Ireland that we're very strong in.
Speaker #4: And now we have Southeastern or Western Europe, Southeastern Europe. And between those two, we have 20 countries in between there that we're going to attack with that Microsoft agreement.
Speaker #4: And then all of the cottage industry products that go with that. So IntoWorks, number one, will be onboarding vendors that they see as a great fit that we have because we have a big robust portfolio of vendors compared to them.
Dale Foster: Interworks, number one, will be onboarding vendors that they see as a great fit that we have because we have a big, robust portfolio of vendors compared to them. On their side, they already have in the cloud, on the marketplace, vendors that are transacting that we will take advantage of. You'll see those integrate very quickly. The fact that we're already using the same platform, it's really getting those two interconnected so that the teams seem pretty seamless and so do our customers.
Dale Foster: Interworks, number one, will be onboarding vendors that they see as a great fit that we have because we have a big, robust portfolio of vendors compared to them. On their side, they already have in the cloud, on the marketplace, vendors that are transacting that we will take advantage of. You'll see those integrate very quickly. The fact that we're already using the same platform, it's really getting those two interconnected so that the teams seem pretty seamless and so do our customers.
Speaker #4: And then cloud, on the marketplace, vendors that are transacting that we will take advantage of. So you'll see those integrate very quickly. And the fact that we're already using the same platform, it's really getting those two interconnected so that the teams see it pretty seamless.
Speaker #4: And so do our customers.
Keith Housum: The last question from me. In your conversations with resellers, what is the pulse on the market in terms of the health of the market versus the prior quarter?
Vincent Colicchio: The last question from me. In your conversations with resellers, what is the pulse on the market in terms of the health of the market versus the prior quarter?
Speaker #6: And last question for me. In your conversations with resellers, what is the pulse on the market in terms of the health of the market versus the prior quarter?
Speaker #4: Yeah. I would be better to answer that next week as we have an open session with our resellers. But as far as and I'll take this from the vendor standpoint first.
Dale Foster: Yeah, I would be better to answer that next week as we have an open session with our resellers. As far as... You know, I'll take this from the vendor standpoint first, and that is, Vince, there are so many vendors coming at us, right? We have to say no, we have to say no, because there's that many, and we have to keep moving our threshold up as far as what can we do in the first 18 months. You know, it used to be $2 or $3 million. Now, is it $15 million that we can do in the first 18 months before we'll even sign them? What is, what is their real go-to-market? Does it fit ours?
Dale Foster: Yeah, I would be better to answer that next week as we have an open session with our resellers. As far as... You know, I'll take this from the vendor standpoint first, and that is, Vince, there are so many vendors coming at us, right? We have to say no, we have to say no, because there's that many, and we have to keep moving our threshold up as far as what can we do in the first 18 months. You know, it used to be $2 or $3 million. Now, is it $15 million that we can do in the first 18 months before we'll even sign them? What is, what is their real go-to-market? Does it fit ours?
Speaker #4: And that is, Vince, there are so many vendors coming at us, right? We have to say no. We have to say no. Because there's that many.
Speaker #4: And we have to keep moving our threshold up as far as what can we do in the first 18 months. It used to be 2 or 3 million dollars.
Speaker #4: Now is it 15 million dollars if we can do in the first 18 months. Before, we'll even sign them. What is the real go-to-market?
Speaker #4: Does it fit ours? So we're just asking a lot more questions because we know when Charles our chief alliance officer says yes, that's when all the man-hours kick in for us.
Dale Foster: We're just asking a lot more questions because we know when Charles, our Chief Alliance Officer, says, yes, that's when all the man-hours kick in for us. We want to make sure that we have a good, you know, base to start with before we say yes to that vendor to onboard them. On the reseller side, we haven't seen slowdown. We've seen some consolidation between, you know, companies buying each other up, which is a natural occurrence for us. For us, we're typically transacting with both parties anyway, so it's just a timing thing.
Dale Foster: We're just asking a lot more questions because we know when Charles, our Chief Alliance Officer, says, yes, that's when all the man-hours kick in for us. We want to make sure that we have a good, you know, base to start with before we say yes to that vendor to onboard them. On the reseller side, we haven't seen slowdown. We've seen some consolidation between, you know, companies buying each other up, which is a natural occurrence for us. For us, we're typically transacting with both parties anyway, so it's just a timing thing.
Speaker #4: So we want to make sure that we have a good base to start with before we say yes to that vendor to onboard them.
Speaker #4: On the reseller side, we haven't seen slowdown. We've seen some consolidation between companies buying each other up, which is a natural occurrence for us.
Speaker #4: But for us, we're typically transacting with both parties anyway. So it's just a timing thing.
Speaker #6: Thanks, Del.
Sean Mansouri: Thanks, Dale.
Vincent Colicchio: Thanks, Dale.
Sean Mansouri: Thank you. We'll take our next question from Bill Dezellem with Tieton Capital Management. Please go ahead. Your line is now open.
Operator: Thank you. We'll take our next question from Bill Dezellem with Tieton Capital Management. Please go ahead. Your line is now open.
Speaker #7: Thank you. We'll take our next question from Bill DeZellem with Titan Capital. Please go ahead. Your line is now open.
Bill Dezellem: Thank you. Would you please walk through the size of the Fortinet relationship and what the potential is for that to move the needle for Climb?
Bill Dezellem: Thank you. Would you please walk through the size of the Fortinet relationship and what the potential is for that to move the needle for Climb?
Speaker #8: Thank you. Would you please walk through the size of the Fortinet relationship and what the potential is for that to move the needle for Climb?
Speaker #6: Yeah. So Bill, thanks. So take a look at Fortinet. They're on the NASDAQ, right? A great company. The relationship started from the top. They usually start in the middle and then move up.
Dale Foster: Yeah. Bill, thanks. they're, you know, take a look at Fortinet. They're on the Nasdaq, right? A great company. the relationship started from the top. It usually starts in the middle and then moves up, but, this one started at the top with the C-level. They, you know, they have some of the bigger distributors that are out there. They have, you know, two of the largest distributors in the world. Why do they need Climb? It's really for what we do for companies that are just getting into the market, and that is to fill in a lot of the gaps and being that, you know, high-touch distributor that's going into a wider market than just, you know, tier one or Fortune 500 companies.
Dale Foster: Yeah. Bill, thanks. they're, you know, take a look at Fortinet. They're on the Nasdaq, right? A great company. the relationship started from the top. It usually starts in the middle and then moves up, but, this one started at the top with the C-level. They, you know, they have some of the bigger distributors that are out there. They have, you know, two of the largest distributors in the world. Why do they need Climb? It's really for what we do for companies that are just getting into the market, and that is to fill in a lot of the gaps and being that, you know, high-touch distributor that's going into a wider market than just, you know, tier one or Fortune 500 companies.
Speaker #6: But this one started at the top with C-levels. They have some of the bigger distributors that are out there. They have two of the largest distributors in the world.
Speaker #6: So why did they need Climb? It's really for what we do for companies that are just getting into the market. And that is to fill in a lot of the gaps and being that high-touch distributor that's going into a wider market than just tier one or Fortune 500 companies.
Speaker #6: So if you look at what their overall sales and I think they break them down, it's about a 2.5 billion addressable market in the US that they're already selling into.
Dale Foster: If you look at what their overall sales, and I think they break them down, you know, it's about a $2.5 billion addressable market in the US that they're already selling into. Who are they competing against, right? If you look up the stack, they're competing with Palo Alto, Juniper, and Cisco. That's their three big above them.
Dale Foster: If you look at what their overall sales, and I think they break them down, you know, it's about a $2.5 billion addressable market in the US that they're already selling into. Who are they competing against, right? If you look up the stack, they're competing with Palo Alto, Juniper, and Cisco. That's their three big above them.
Speaker #6: And who are they competing against, right? If you look up the stack, they're competing with Palo Alto, Juniper, and Cisco. That's their three big above them.
Speaker #6: They're considered number four. And then below them, we carry some of the lines below them. But they said, "Wait a second. We have a targeted distributor.
Dale Foster: They're considered number 4. Then below them, you know, we carry some of those lines below them. They said, Wait a second, we have a targeted distributor. They have field sellers. I think this would be the most important thing to take away. That is, when we're talking to their executives, they said, Wait a second, you mean we can fly into a region because we have regional sales people, and your sales reps will take us into 3 new resellers that we've never met before? I'm like, That's what they do every day with vendors. They don't get that from, you know, tier 1, or the top distributors because they can't take them in there when they're selling Cisco, Juniper, and Palo Alto, and those customers, because they're like, Hey, we're displacing one of our other vendors. We don't have that issue at all.
Dale Foster: They're considered number 4. Then below them, you know, we carry some of those lines below them. They said, Wait a second, we have a targeted distributor. They have field sellers. I think this would be the most important thing to take away. That is, when we're talking to their executives, they said, Wait a second, you mean we can fly into a region because we have regional sales people, and your sales reps will take us into 3 new resellers that we've never met before? I'm like, That's what they do every day with vendors. They don't get that from, you know, tier 1, or the top distributors because they can't take them in there when they're selling Cisco, Juniper, and Palo Alto, and those customers, because they're like, Hey, we're displacing one of our other vendors. We don't have that issue at all.
Speaker #6: They have field sellers." And I think this would be the most important thing to take away. And that is when we're talking to their executives, they said, "Wait a second.
Speaker #6: You mean we can fly into a region because we have regional salespeople and we can and your sales reps will take us into three new resellers that we've never met before." And I'm like, "That's what they do every day." With vendors.
Speaker #6: They don't get that from tier one or the top distributors because they can't take them in there when they're selling Cisco, Juniper, and Palo Alto and those customers, because they're like, "Hey, we're displacing one of our other vendors." We don't have that issue at all.
Speaker #6: We don't have a really cross-competing product with Fortinet. We have a bunch of smaller ones. But nothing that goes as wide as Fortinet goes.
Dale Foster: We don't have a really cross competing product with Fortinet. We have a bunch of smaller ones, but nothing that goes as wide as Fortinet goes. If you look at what they do, I mean, Fortinet goes all the way from firewall to cameras, right? I mean, they are such engineering-type company, so it's a good fit for us. You know, the acceptance... Look at $2.5 billion, you know, 10% of that is something that we're going after in the next 18 months, and we think we can get there. I think Fortinet will be our top 3 vendor this time next year.
Dale Foster: We don't have a really cross competing product with Fortinet. We have a bunch of smaller ones, but nothing that goes as wide as Fortinet goes. If you look at what they do, I mean, Fortinet goes all the way from firewall to cameras, right? I mean, they are such engineering-type company, so it's a good fit for us. You know, the acceptance... Look at $2.5 billion, you know, 10% of that is something that we're going after in the next 18 months, and we think we can get there. I think Fortinet will be our top 3 vendor this time next year.
Speaker #6: And if you look at what they do, I mean, Fortinet goes all the way from firewall to cameras, right? I mean, they are such engineering-type company.
Speaker #6: So it's a good fit for us. And the acceptance. So look at 2.5 billion dollars. 10% of that is something that we're going after in the next 18 months.
Speaker #6: And we think we can get there. And I think Fortinet will be our top three vendor this time next year.
Bill Dezellem: Dale, if I do that math, 10% of $2.5 billion, are you saying that you're thinking that this could lead to $250 million in Gross Billings for you, in, I guess it would be 2027 if we look out a year from now?
Speaker #8: So Dale, if I do that math, 10% of two and a half billion, are you saying that you're thinking that this could lead to two hundred fifty million of gross billings for you in, I guess it would be '27 if we look out a year from now?
Bill Dezellem: Dale, if I do that math, 10% of $2.5 billion, are you saying that you're thinking that this could lead to $250 million in Gross Billings for you, in, I guess it would be 2027 if we look out a year from now?
Speaker #6: Yeah. I think so. I think it's 18 months that we'll get on that run rate for them. It's just a good relationship. The Fortinet teams, the first thing it really happens and when I say this magic happens, it's when our field sellers get with their field sellers and go into new accounts and give the value pitch.
Dale Foster: Yeah, I think so. I think it's 18 months that we'll get on that run rate for them. It's just a good relationship. You know, the Fortinet teams, the first thing it really happens, and when I say this, magic happens, it's when our field sellers get with their field sellers and go into new accounts and give the value pitch. It only takes a couple, you know, times to do that, and then our teams take it from there, and they don't have to do a four-legged call. It's them delivering the Fortinet pitch as they get familiar with it. We're getting closer and closer to them. They've been just a great partner that they feel like a small company touch to us, which is refreshing.
Dale Foster: Yeah, I think so. I think it's 18 months that we'll get on that run rate for them. It's just a good relationship. You know, the Fortinet teams, the first thing it really happens, and when I say this, magic happens, it's when our field sellers get with their field sellers and go into new accounts and give the value pitch. It only takes a couple, you know, times to do that, and then our teams take it from there, and they don't have to do a four-legged call. It's them delivering the Fortinet pitch as they get familiar with it. We're getting closer and closer to them. They've been just a great partner that they feel like a small company touch to us, which is refreshing.
Speaker #6: It only takes a couple times to do that. And then our teams take it from there. They don't have to do a four-legged call.
Speaker #6: It's them delivering the Fortinet pitch as they get familiar with it. So we're getting closer and closer to them. They've been just a great partner out of they feel like a small company touch to us, which is refreshing.
Bill Dezellem: Yeah, that's helpful. Congratulations, by the way. That's a great win.
Bill Dezellem: Yeah, that's helpful. Congratulations, by the way. That's a great win.
Speaker #8: Yeah. That's helpful. And then congratulations, by the way. That's a great win. Actually, let me take that one step further. Do you see other companies that are in a similar situation where all of a sudden, someone in their C-suite is saying the same thing that you heard from the Fortinet leaders?
Dale Foster: Yeah.
Dale Foster: Yeah.
Bill Dezellem: Let me take that one step further. Do you see other companies that are in a similar situation where all of a sudden someone in their C-suite is saying the same thing that you heard from the Fortinet leaders?
Bill Dezellem: Let me take that one step further. Do you see other companies that are in a similar situation where all of a sudden someone in their C-suite is saying the same thing that you heard from the Fortinet leaders?
Dale Foster: I feel like you're reading my email, but yes, we're getting many inbound from companies that are much, much larger. You know, I mean, I'll bring up CrowdStrike. We talked to them about 2 years ago. We were in a competitive with some of the other distributors. They decided to go a different direction, based on just some of the support that some of these other disties would give them or potentially, you know, say that they would give them. You know, if I go back 6 years, Bill, we were out there, you know, signing companies that would fog a mirror and just go after them because we needed to have more products for our sales teams to sell.
Dale Foster: I feel like you're reading my email, but yes, we're getting many inbound from companies that are much, much larger. You know, I mean, I'll bring up CrowdStrike. We talked to them about 2 years ago. We were in a competitive with some of the other distributors. They decided to go a different direction, based on just some of the support that some of these other disties would give them or potentially, you know, say that they would give them. You know, if I go back 6 years, Bill, we were out there, you know, signing companies that would fog a mirror and just go after them because we needed to have more products for our sales teams to sell.
Speaker #6: I feel like you're reading my email. But yes. We were getting many inbound from companies that are much, much larger. And I mean, I'll bring up CrowdStrike.
Speaker #6: We talked to them about two years ago. We were in a competitive with some of the other distributors. They decided to go a different direction based on some of the just some of the support that some of these other distributors would give them or potentially say that they would give them.
Speaker #6: But if I go back six years, Bill, we were out there signing companies that would fog a mirror and just go after them because we needed to have more products for our sales teams to sell.
Speaker #6: Now, the focus is curating the ones and the relationships that we currently have or almost ready to sign to make sure that they're really the right ones for us.
Dale Foster: Now, the focus is curating the ones and the relationships that we currently have or almost ready to sign to make sure that they're really the right ones for us. Yes, are we getting larger companies and larger at-bats with them without having to prospect them? For sure. There's some, you know, multi, you know, in the $500 million, $600 million range companies we're talking to on a regular basis. A lot of times we say no, because they're not ready for us or we're not ready for them. It could be a, it could be a connection through systems that we don't think that we can, you know, we'll burn more cycles than it's worth, but we are getting a lot of those at-bats.
Dale Foster: Now, the focus is curating the ones and the relationships that we currently have or almost ready to sign to make sure that they're really the right ones for us. Yes, are we getting larger companies and larger at-bats with them without having to prospect them? For sure. There's some, you know, multi, you know, in the $500 million, $600 million range companies we're talking to on a regular basis. A lot of times we say no, because they're not ready for us or we're not ready for them. It could be a, it could be a connection through systems that we don't think that we can, you know, we'll burn more cycles than it's worth, but we are getting a lot of those at-bats.
Speaker #6: But yes, are we getting larger companies and larger at-bats with them without having to prospect them? For sure. There's some multi in the 500 to 600 million dollar range companies we're talking to on a regular basis.
Speaker #6: And a lot of times, we say no because they're not ready for us or we're not ready for them. It could be a it could be a connection through systems that we don't think that we can will burn more cycles than it's worth.
Speaker #6: But we are getting a lot of those at-bats. And the other thing is we say we have a limited line card, but it keeps sneaking up on us.
Dale Foster: You know, the other thing is we say we have a limited line card, but it keeps, you know, sneaking up on us, and then we push our vendors over to Climb Elevate just to transact. I wanna continue to limit our line card. We say it's 70. I want it to be 50, but really, it's 100 right now because we haven't pushed them over to our Climb Elevate, where we'll still transact, but it just burns cycles, and we wanna focus our sales and marketing and service cycles on our top 50.
Dale Foster: You know, the other thing is we say we have a limited line card, but it keeps, you know, sneaking up on us, and then we push our vendors over to Climb Elevate just to transact. I wanna continue to limit our line card. We say it's 70. I want it to be 50, but really, it's 100 right now because we haven't pushed them over to our Climb Elevate, where we'll still transact, but it just burns cycles, and we wanna focus our sales and marketing and service cycles on our top 50.
Speaker #6: And then we push our vendors over to Climb Elevate just to transact. And I want to continue to limit our line card. We say it's 70.
Speaker #6: I want it to be 50. But really, it's 100 right now because we haven't pushed them over to our Climb Elevate where we'll still transact.
Speaker #6: But it just burns cycles. And we want to focus our sales and marketing and service cycles on our top 50.
Speaker #8: Thank you. And a couple more questions. Let me shift to Citrix. The implication then of the way that that change took place last year is that the comparison that you all are going to have in Q2, Q3, and Q4 of this year could lead to very strong comps given that you last year simply had to fill in that hole and now you're going to be building off of that.
Bill Dezellem: Thank you. A couple more questions. Let me shift to Citrix. The implication then of the way that change took place last year is that the comparison that you all are going to have in Q2, Q3, and Q4 of this year could lead to very strong comps, given that you, last year, simply had to fill in that hole, now you're gonna be building off of that. Is that the right way to think about that?
Bill Dezellem: Thank you. A couple more questions. Let me shift to Citrix. The implication then of the way that change took place last year is that the comparison that you all are going to have in Q2, Q3, and Q4 of this year could lead to very strong comps, given that you, last year, simply had to fill in that hole, now you're gonna be building off of that. Is that the right way to think about that?
Speaker #8: Is that the right way to think about that?
Dale Foster: It is. I guess it feels like it's already been done with us, Bill, 'cause we've been there, done that, forgot about it, right? We've already filled it in with other vendors. We know what our run rates are, and that's the nice thing about this recurring, you know, revenue model, is we know that, you know, 80% to 90% of what we sold last year, that as long as we're doing a good job and the vendor is still producing a good product and good updates, that we're gonna get that renewal. You know, I mean, the goal is to have the renewal rate over 100%, which means they're picking up more licenses and seats, you know, going forward. Yeah, we really haven't thought about it that way.
Dale Foster: It is. I guess it feels like it's already been done with us, Bill, 'cause we've been there, done that, forgot about it, right? We've already filled it in with other vendors. We know what our run rates are, and that's the nice thing about this recurring, you know, revenue model, is we know that, you know, 80% to 90% of what we sold last year, that as long as we're doing a good job and the vendor is still producing a good product and good updates, that we're gonna get that renewal. You know, I mean, the goal is to have the renewal rate over 100%, which means they're picking up more licenses and seats, you know, going forward. Yeah, we really haven't thought about it that way.
Speaker #6: It is. I guess it feels like it's already been done with us, Bill, because we've been there, done there, forgot about it, right? We have already filled it in with other vendors.
Speaker #6: We know what our run rates are. And that's the nice thing about this recurring revenue model is we know that 80 to 90 percent of what we sold last year that as long as we're doing a good job and the vendor is still producing a good product and good updates, that we're going to get that renewal.
Speaker #6: I mean, the goal is to have the renewal rate over 100%, which means they're picking up more license and seats. Going forward. But yeah, we don't we really haven't thought about it that way.
Speaker #6: We look at just what our run rate is. What is our piece with Citrix? We've already forgot about that. It's been in the news quite a bit, just on the different tax that Citrix has made.
Dale Foster: We look at just what our run rate is, what is our piece with Citrix. We've already forgot about that. It's been in the news quite a bit, just on the different taxes Citrix has made. Their last one was kind of funny that they said that they are truly a channel company, even though they cut a big chunk of the channel out a year ago. I think they thought people forgot about it. We've replaced it. We have two or three different lines. We were getting ready to sign a line that goes back to our Citrix customers. We were replacing with some of the Microsoft business, which is a competitor to Citrix, and same thing with Parallels, which is another one of our vendors that we've replaced that hole with.
Dale Foster: We look at just what our run rate is, what is our piece with Citrix. We've already forgot about that. It's been in the news quite a bit, just on the different taxes Citrix has made. Their last one was kind of funny that they said that they are truly a channel company, even though they cut a big chunk of the channel out a year ago. I think they thought people forgot about it. We've replaced it. We have two or three different lines. We were getting ready to sign a line that goes back to our Citrix customers. We were replacing with some of the Microsoft business, which is a competitor to Citrix, and same thing with Parallels, which is another one of our vendors that we've replaced that hole with.
Speaker #6: Their last one was kind of funny that they said that they are truly a channel company even though they cut a big chunk of the channel out a year ago.
Speaker #6: I think they thought people forgot about it. But we've replaced it with—we have two or three different lines. We're getting ready to sign a line that goes back to our Citrix customers.
Speaker #6: We were replacing it with some of the Microsoft business, which is a competitor to Citrix. And same thing with Parallels, which is another one of our vendors that we've replaced that hole with.
Speaker #8: Great. Thank you. And then one final question, please. I think that yesterday, Vast and Supermicro signed or announced a deal. What are the implications if any for that with you all?
Bill Dezellem: Great. Thank you. One final question, please. I think that yesterday, Vast and Supermicro signed or announced a deal. What are the implications, if any, for that with you all?
Bill Dezellem: Great. Thank you. One final question, please. I think that yesterday, Vast and Supermicro signed or announced a deal. What are the implications, if any, for that with you all?
Speaker #6: Yeah. And so the Vast data, they have their user conference. We have people there in Salt Lake this week. Of our team members, both from the European side, which is our bigger number, and then from the US side.
Dale Foster: Yeah, our Vast Data, you know, they have their user conference. We have people there in Salt Lake this week of our team members, both from the European side, which is a bigger number, and then from the US side. I think it's a good thing. I assume they use the conference to announce that at. I think it's only good, right? Vast, you know, says they're a software company, but they're still, you know, it's a big piece of hardware that goes into distributors or it's the OEMs, like a Supermicro. We have a relationship with Supermicro, we've had for the last 10 years. It's a good thing because right now, a lot of their builds are being done by a company called Telrad that Arrow bought. That's the build.
Dale Foster: Yeah, our Vast Data, you know, they have their user conference. We have people there in Salt Lake this week of our team members, both from the European side, which is a bigger number, and then from the US side. I think it's a good thing. I assume they use the conference to announce that at. I think it's only good, right? Vast, you know, says they're a software company, but they're still, you know, it's a big piece of hardware that goes into distributors or it's the OEMs, like a Supermicro. We have a relationship with Supermicro, we've had for the last 10 years. It's a good thing because right now, a lot of their builds are being done by a company called Telrad that Arrow bought. That's the build.
Speaker #6: And I think it's a good thing. I assume they use the conference to announce that at. But if you I think it's only good, right?
Speaker #6: Vast, it says they're a software company, but they're still it's a big piece of hardware that goes. And it's a distributor's or it's the OEMs like the Supermicro.
Speaker #6: And we have a relationship with Supermicro. We've had it for the last 10 years. It's a good thing because right now, a lot of their builds are being done by a company called Telrad that Arrow bought.
Speaker #6: So that's the build. So what does it do? It just makes it faster because right now, Vast is dependent on this hardware GPUs. Who has the GPUs?
Dale Foster: What does it do? It just makes it faster because right now, you know, Vast is dependent on this hardware, you know, GPUs, who has the GPUs, who has the metal to put their software on top of to run. I think it'll actually speed up the actual delivery cycle of all these big, you know, AI engines that need fast data storage. You know, 'cause that's what Vast does. I mean, It's about how fast they can deliver data up to an AI engine. I think it's only a good thing. Supermicro has some of the best products out there. I mean, that's how most of the. If everybody remembers the HCI, the compute space with Nutanix and Rubrik, that was all based on Supermicro for the longest time.
Dale Foster: What does it do? It just makes it faster because right now, you know, Vast is dependent on this hardware, you know, GPUs, who has the GPUs, who has the metal to put their software on top of to run. I think it'll actually speed up the actual delivery cycle of all these big, you know, AI engines that need fast data storage. You know, 'cause that's what Vast does. I mean, It's about how fast they can deliver data up to an AI engine. I think it's only a good thing. Supermicro has some of the best products out there. I mean, that's how most of the. If everybody remembers the HCI, the compute space with Nutanix and Rubrik, that was all based on Supermicro for the longest time.
Speaker #6: Who has the metal to put their software on top of to run? So I think it'll actually speed up the extra delivery cycle of all these big AI engines that need fast data storage because that's what Vast does.
Speaker #6: I mean, they are it's about how fast they can deliver data up to an AI engine. So I think it's only a good thing.
Speaker #6: And Supermicro has some of the best products out there. I mean, that's how most of the if everybody remembers the HCI, the compute space with Nutanix and Rubrik, that was all based on Supermicro for the longest time.
Speaker #6: So it's just a good alternative to what they currently had. So it's a number two. And I think it'll be good.
Dale Foster: It's just a good alternative to what they currently had. It's a number two, and I think it'll be good.
Dale Foster: It's just a good alternative to what they currently had. It's a number two, and I think it'll be good.
Speaker #8: Great. Thank you and congratulations on a strong quarter.
Bill Dezellem: Great. Thank you, and congratulations on a strong quarter.
Bill Dezellem: Great. Thank you, and congratulations on a strong quarter.
Speaker #6: Thanks, Bill.
Dale Foster: Thanks, Bill.
Dale Foster: Thanks, Bill.
Speaker #9: Thank you. We'll take our next question from Howard Root, who is a private investor. Please go ahead. Your line is now open. Howard, please check the mute function on your device.
Sean Mansouri: Thank you. We'll take our next question from Howard Root, who is a private investor. Please go ahead. Your line is now open. Howard, please check the mute function on your device.
Operator: Thank you. We'll take our next question from Howard Root, who is a private investor. Please go ahead. Your line is now open. Howard, please check the mute function on your device.
Howard Root: Sorry about that.
Howard Root: Sorry about that.
Speaker #10: Sorry about that.
Dale Foster: Oh, there he is.
Dale Foster: Oh, there he is.
Speaker #6: Oh, there he is.
Howard Root: Sorry, I'm gonna. Yeah. Yeah, congratulations on a, you know, nice conclusion to the year. I'll try to be briefer. I got two questions, one on M&A. You know, it looks like the Interworks was kind of right within the middle of your playbook. You know, it's a territory expansion. You've got synergies. You knew them very well. Then it's at 9.4 times Adjusted EBITDA. Is that? You know, how do you see that fitting in? Is that a little expensive? What do you see as the market out there for acquisitions going forward? Has it come down based on market turmoil, or where are you right now?
Howard Root: Sorry, I'm gonna. Yeah. Yeah, congratulations on a, you know, nice conclusion to the year. I'll try to be briefer. I got two questions, one on M&A. You know, it looks like the Interworks was kind of right within the middle of your playbook. You know, it's a territory expansion. You've got synergies. You knew them very well. Then it's at 9.4 times Adjusted EBITDA. Is that? You know, how do you see that fitting in? Is that a little expensive? What do you see as the market out there for acquisitions going forward? Has it come down based on market turmoil, or where are you right now?
Speaker #10: Sorry. I'm in there. Yeah. Yeah. Congratulations, Anna. Nice conclusion to the year. I'll try to be briefer. I got two questions. One on M&A.
Speaker #10: It looks like the Innerworks was kind of right within the middle of your playbook. It's a territory expansion. You've got synergies. You knew them very well.
Speaker #10: And then it's a 9.4 times adjusted EBITDA. Is that how do you see that fitting in? Is that the way to look at it?
Speaker #10: Is that a little expensive? What do you see as the market out there for acquisitions going forward as it come down based on market turmoil or where are you right now?
Speaker #6: So Bill—I'm sorry, Bill. Sorry, Howard. So, Howard, here's how we kind of think about it. And we go back to our early days of acquisitions.
Dale Foster: Bill, I'm sorry, Bill. Sorry, Howard. Howard, here's how we kind of think about it. We go back to our early days of acquisitions, you know, when we were trading in that, you know, 7 to 9 range, and that's kind of where we looked to start. It depends on, you know, four or five different things. With these guys, number one, we knew them for a long time. We know their parent company very well, so it was a comfort factor that way. Plus, the Microsoft piece of it as far as we want, you're like, Why, why do you need really need Microsoft? It's still just a great cornerstone to have in your platform marketplace and in your company, 'cause you can add so many products around that to support it.
Dale Foster: Bill, I'm sorry, Bill. Sorry, Howard. Howard, here's how we kind of think about it. We go back to our early days of acquisitions, you know, when we were trading in that, you know, 7 to 9 range, and that's kind of where we looked to start. It depends on, you know, four or five different things. With these guys, number one, we knew them for a long time. We know their parent company very well, so it was a comfort factor that way. Plus, the Microsoft piece of it as far as we want, you're like, Why, why do you need really need Microsoft? It's still just a great cornerstone to have in your platform marketplace and in your company, 'cause you can add so many products around that to support it.
Speaker #6: When we were trading in that 7 to 9 range and that's kind of where we looked to start. And it depends on four or five different things.
Speaker #6: And with these guys, number one, we knew them for a long time. We know their parent company very well. So it was a comfort factor that way.
Speaker #6: Plus, the Microsoft piece of it, as far as we want here, like, "Why do you need really any Microsoft?" And it's still just a great cornerstone to have in your platform marketplace and in your company because you can add some of your products around that to support it.
Speaker #6: But the other piece of it is what is their margin profile? And their margin profile compared to us is double what we have in the US.
Dale Foster: The other piece of it is, you know, what is their margin profile? Their margin profile, compared to us, is double what we have in the US. Will we pay a little bit more than that 8? I always, I don't know why, I always say, "Hey, we're gonna start at 8, and then what are the positives and negatives?" If you look back to the DSS transaction, why was that as a less multiple? Real simple. I mean, they were, you know, all focused on Adobe. If you lose Adobe, you know, there's just more risk involved in that, so that's how that negotiation happened. On this side, their margins are higher. They're in a territory that we are not in and not even selling into.
Dale Foster: The other piece of it is, you know, what is their margin profile? Their margin profile, compared to us, is double what we have in the US. Will we pay a little bit more than that 8? I always, I don't know why, I always say, "Hey, we're gonna start at 8, and then what are the positives and negatives?" If you look back to the DSS transaction, why was that as a less multiple? Real simple. I mean, they were, you know, all focused on Adobe. If you lose Adobe, you know, there's just more risk involved in that, so that's how that negotiation happened. On this side, their margins are higher. They're in a territory that we are not in and not even selling into.
Speaker #6: So, will we pay a little bit more than that 8? And I don't know why. I always say, "Hey, we're going to start at 8." And then, what are the positives and negatives?
Speaker #6: If you look back to the DSS transaction, why was that a less multiple? Real simple. I mean, they were all focused on Adobe. So if you lose Adobe, there's just more risk involved in that.
Speaker #6: So that's how that negotiation happened. On this side, their margins are higher. They're in a territory that we are not in and not have been selling into.
Speaker #6: And the nice thing about it, they're in a territory that's not that competitive that is starving for new vendors to get into. So that's how the negotiations went to get to that.
Dale Foster: The nice thing about it, they're in a territory that's not that competitive, that is starving for new vendors to get into. That's how the negotiations went, you know, to get to that. I'm still looking in that same range. We start at 8, and we'll go up or down from there.
Dale Foster: The nice thing about it, they're in a territory that's not that competitive, that is starving for new vendors to get into. That's how the negotiations went, you know, to get to that. I'm still looking in that same range. We start at 8, and we'll go up or down from there.
Speaker #6: But I'm still looking in that same range. We start at 8 and we'll go up or down from there.
Speaker #10: So just kind of looking on that, following up on that, to me, the only reason to eliminate the dividend is really to grow a pile to do bigger acquisitions.
Howard Root: Just kind of looking on that, following up on that, you know, to me, the only reason to eliminate the dividend is really to grow a pile to do bigger acquisitions. This is relatively smaller, compared to like Douglas Stewart was bigger, and that was 18 months ago. You know, I kind of look at, is that a slow pace for you over these 18 months? You, I mean, it seems that you want to do at least 1 or 2 a year. Is that the way you look at the dividend? Because to cut the dividend, to spend money internally, well, you're generating plenty of cash for your internal projects.
Howard Root: Just kind of looking on that, following up on that, you know, to me, the only reason to eliminate the dividend is really to grow a pile to do bigger acquisitions. This is relatively smaller, compared to like Douglas Stewart was bigger, and that was 18 months ago. You know, I kind of look at, is that a slow pace for you over these 18 months? You, I mean, it seems that you want to do at least 1 or 2 a year. Is that the way you look at the dividend? Because to cut the dividend, to spend money internally, well, you're generating plenty of cash for your internal projects.
Speaker #10: This is relatively smaller compared to Douglas Stewart, which was bigger. And that was 18 months ago. I kind of look at it as— is that a slow pace for you over these 18 months?
Speaker #10: I mean, it seems that you wanted to do at least one or two a year. And then is that the way you look at the dividend?
Speaker #10: Because to cut the dividend to spend money internally, well, you're generating plenty of cash for your internal projects. It has to be using that cash.
Howard Root: It has to be using that cash, and we'd hate to see it pile up in treasury, but really to apply to buy synergistic targets, and you must be seeing plenty of them out there, and maybe larger than this Interworks deal.
Howard Root: It has to be using that cash, and we'd hate to see it pile up in treasury, but really to apply to buy synergistic targets, and you must be seeing plenty of them out there, and maybe larger than this Interworks deal.
Speaker #10: And we'd hate to see it pile up in treasury. But really, to apply to buy synergistic targets, and you must be seeing plenty of them out there—maybe even larger than this Innerworkings deal.
Dale Foster: Without giving you specifics, Howard, you're spot on. You're spot on. There's a lot of deals coming at us. We are gonna use the capital. I mean, you know, we talked that we are very CapEx light, and we are gonna accelerate our acquisition interfaces. I have. If you look at my travel, I've been in Western Europe more than I have been before because there's that many targets, there's that many ones coming at us. The roll-up that we have talked about that happened in the US, you know, from 2006 to 2017, is happening in Europe, and we want to be part of it. Here's the good thing for Climb, in that you have these 3 massive distributors we talk about all the time.
Dale Foster: Without giving you specifics, Howard, you're spot on. You're spot on. There's a lot of deals coming at us. We are gonna use the capital. I mean, you know, we talked that we are very CapEx light, and we are gonna accelerate our acquisition interfaces. I have. If you look at my travel, I've been in Western Europe more than I have been before because there's that many targets, there's that many ones coming at us. The roll-up that we have talked about that happened in the US, you know, from 2006 to 2017, is happening in Europe, and we want to be part of it. Here's the good thing for Climb, in that you have these 3 massive distributors we talk about all the time.
Speaker #6: Without giving you specifics, Howard, you're spot on. You're spot on. There's a lot of deals coming at us. We are going to use the capital.
Speaker #6: I mean, we talked that we are a very CapEx light. And we are going to accelerate our acquisition interfaces. I have if you look at my travel, I've been in Western Europe more than I have been before.
Speaker #6: Because there are that many targets, there are that many ones coming at us. The roll-up that we have talked about that happened in the US from 2006 to 2017 is happening in Europe.
Speaker #6: And we want to be part of it. Here's the good thing for Climb in that you have these three massive distributors. We talk about it all the time.
Dale Foster: They're, you know, 50 billion dollar plus. The targets that we're looking at are so insignificant for them, unless they were a real strategic reason. We're not competing with them. We're competing with other strategics that are, you know, similar in size, which there's only two or three of them over there, or they're doing a roll-up between the two companies to get larger to make more of a significant impact, or it could be a regional expansion. Right now, I can't tell you how many I've talked to, but how many that we're in discussions with is, you know, a lot more than a handful. Yes, the dividend will be going to, you know, toward the M&A side of things that we think. You know, like we always say, is it gonna be accretive to us?
Dale Foster: They're, you know, 50 billion dollar plus. The targets that we're looking at are so insignificant for them, unless they were a real strategic reason. We're not competing with them. We're competing with other strategics that are, you know, similar in size, which there's only two or three of them over there, or they're doing a roll-up between the two companies to get larger to make more of a significant impact, or it could be a regional expansion. Right now, I can't tell you how many I've talked to, but how many that we're in discussions with is, you know, a lot more than a handful. Yes, the dividend will be going to, you know, toward the M&A side of things that we think. You know, like we always say, is it gonna be accretive to us?
Speaker #6: They're $50 billion plus. The targets that we're looking at are so insignificant for them unless they were a real strategic reason. We're not competing with them.
Speaker #6: We're competing with other strategics that are similar in size, which is only two or three of them over there, or they're doing a roll-up between the two companies to get larger.
Speaker #6: To make more of a significant impact or could be a regional expansion. So right now, I can't tell you how many I've talked to, but how many that were in discussions with is a lot more than a handful.
Speaker #6: So yes, the dividend will be going toward the M&A side of things that we think like we always say is it going to be a creative to us?
Speaker #6: Is it going to be an expansion? Is it going to be a vendor acquisition that we can't get or it's going to take too long to get that vendor signed that we think we can take the other regions?
Dale Foster: Is it gonna be an expansion? Is it gonna be a vendor acquisition that we can't get, or it's gonna take too long to get that vendor sign, that we think we can take the other regions? It's all those things lined up. It has not changed, you know, since we started this.
Dale Foster: Is it gonna be an expansion? Is it gonna be a vendor acquisition that we can't get, or it's gonna take too long to get that vendor sign, that we think we can take the other regions? It's all those things lined up. It has not changed, you know, since we started this.
Speaker #6: But it's all those things lined up. It has not changed since we started this.
Speaker #10: And the pace of acquisitions, you'd expect to do one or two in 2026?
Howard Root: The pace of acquisitions, you'd expect to do one or two in 2026?
Howard Root: The pace of acquisitions, you'd expect to do one or two in 2026?
Dale Foster: I'm. Yes.
Dale Foster: I'm. Yes.
Speaker #6: I'm yes.
Speaker #10: Okay. All right. Well, yeah, I don't want to make you uncomfortable answering stuff on that. But it just seemed that we had 18 months since the last one, and that was not because of lack of effort, but just it didn't come together.
Howard Root: Okay.
Howard Root: Okay.
Dale Foster: Yeah.
Dale Foster: Yeah.
Howard Root: Well, I, yeah, I don't want to make you uncomfortable answering stuff on that. It just seemed that we had 18 months since the last one, that was not because of lack of effort, but it did not come together. Maybe now this is the breaking, you get 3 here in the next year instead of 0. Second question for me on profitability. Here, you know, congratulations, you had a really tough comparable in Q4 and having to deal with that. I will kind of ignore that a little bit because of the large vendor transaction you had that affected billings and your Gross Profit. If you look at it over a year, your Gross Billings were up 18%, your Gross Profit was up a little bit less than that.
Howard Root: Well, I, yeah, I don't want to make you uncomfortable answering stuff on that. It just seemed that we had 18 months since the last one, that was not because of lack of effort, but it did not come together. Maybe now this is the breaking, you get 3 here in the next year instead of 0. Second question for me on profitability. Here, you know, congratulations, you had a really tough comparable in Q4 and having to deal with that. I will kind of ignore that a little bit because of the large vendor transaction you had that affected billings and your Gross Profit. If you look at it over a year, your Gross Billings were up 18%, your Gross Profit was up a little bit less than that.
Speaker #10: And maybe now this is the breaking, and you get three here in the next year instead of zero. Second question for me: on profitability in here, congratulations.
Speaker #10: You had a really tough comparable in Q4 and having to deal with that. So I'll kind of ignore that a little bit because of the large vendor transaction you had that affected billings and your gross profit.
Speaker #10: But if you look at it over a year, your gross billings were up 18%. Your gross profit was up a little bit less than that.
Speaker #10: Your margin on gross billings was slipped below 5%. In your SG&A, because of the Douglas Stewart kind of up 20%, so your income from operations only went up about 4% for the year.
Howard Root: Your margin on gross billings was slipped below 5%, and your SG&A, because of the Douglas Stewart, kind of up 20%. Your income from operations only went up about 4% for the year. It, you know, quarterly, your leverage is kind of slipping a little bit. Where, you know, can you give us a quick how that happened and where you see that go from here? Does the Fortinet and Darktrace additions change your profile? It looks like InnerWorkings kind of helps you a little bit on that financial profile as well. Do you see that reverting back up where your gross profit on gross billings is above 5% and your SG&A rises less than your increase in gross billings in the year?
Howard Root: Your margin on gross billings was slipped below 5%, and your SG&A, because of the Douglas Stewart, kind of up 20%. Your income from operations only went up about 4% for the year. It, you know, quarterly, your leverage is kind of slipping a little bit. Where, you know, can you give us a quick how that happened and where you see that go from here? Does the Fortinet and Darktrace additions change your profile? It looks like InnerWorkings kind of helps you a little bit on that financial profile as well. Do you see that reverting back up where your gross profit on gross billings is above 5% and your SG&A rises less than your increase in gross billings in the year?
Speaker #10: And on a quarterly, your leverage is kind of slipping a little bit. And can you give us a quick how that happened and where you see that go from here?
Speaker #10: And does the Fortinet and Darktrace additions change your profile? And it looks like Innerworks kind of helps you a little bit on that financial profile as well.
Speaker #10: But do you see that reverting back up where your gross profit on gross billings is above 5% and your SG&A rises less than your increase in gross billings in the year?
Dale Foster: We're holding, you know, in that. Just look at it as that 5 range, and we, yeah, we slipped it in a quarter. There's some other things in the background that have been happening, but I won't get into some of that stuff. I can tell you that the focus is, and, you know, I wish I could share some of the slides that I shared with our board, but, you know, it's showing how much manual stuff that we deal with in the company. Like I said on the earnings call, you know, we're doing the same thing that we did 30 years ago in distribution, and, you know, Vishal is helping us change that mindset.
Speaker #6: So we're holding in that just looking at that 5 range. And yeah, we slipped in a quarter. There's some other things in the background that have been happening that I won't get into.
Dale Foster: We're holding, you know, in that. Just look at it as that 5 range, and we, yeah, we slipped it in a quarter. There's some other things in the background that have been happening, but I won't get into some of that stuff. I can tell you that the focus is, and, you know, I wish I could share some of the slides that I shared with our board, but, you know, it's showing how much manual stuff that we deal with in the company. Like I said on the earnings call, you know, we're doing the same thing that we did 30 years ago in distribution, and, you know, Vishal is helping us change that mindset.
Speaker #6: Some of that stuff. But I can tell you that the focus is and I wish I could share some of the slides. I shared with our board.
Speaker #6: But it's showing how much manual stuff that we deal with in the company. And like I said on the earnings call, we're doing the same thing that we did 30 years ago in distribution.
Speaker #6: And Vishal is helping us change that mindset. The first thing when the board agreed to go into a new ERP system was the first prime mover to get more efficient.
Dale Foster: The first thing when the board agreed to go into an ERP, new ERP system was the first prime mover to get more efficient. The second one is taking that ERP system and the associate applications with connectors and taking just a lot of cost out of the business, right? We are touching way too many, and I'll just give you some inside baseball. We do 12 quotes and perform 12 quotes for about every order that we get. The first move we had about four years ago was when we moved our average sale price per order up from, you know, $200 to $1,500. We're doing the same work, we're just, you know, the quote size is seven times bigger. That's number one.
Dale Foster: The first thing when the board agreed to go into an ERP, new ERP system was the first prime mover to get more efficient. The second one is taking that ERP system and the associate applications with connectors and taking just a lot of cost out of the business, right? We are touching way too many, and I'll just give you some inside baseball. We do 12 quotes and perform 12 quotes for about every order that we get. The first move we had about four years ago was when we moved our average sale price per order up from, you know, $200 to $1,500. We're doing the same work, we're just, you know, the quote size is seven times bigger. That's number one.
Speaker #6: The second one is taking that ERP system and the associate applications with connectors and taking just a lot of cost out of the business, right?
Speaker #6: We are touching way too many. And I'll just give you some inside baseball. We do 12 quotes and perform 12 quotes for about every order that we get.
Speaker #6: The first move we had about four years ago was when we moved our average sale price per order up from $200 to $1,500. So we're doing the same work.
Speaker #6: We're just the quote size is seven times bigger. So that's number one. It's the efficiency that we think that we can get out of our systems to keep the same labor force that we have today and be one and a half times the size.
Dale Foster: It's the efficiency that we think that we can get out of our systems to keep the same labor force that we have today and be, you know, one and a half times the size. That is the real goal. Back to your, Howard, that you love to point out, you know, that 5-3-2, this is what I talked about.
Dale Foster: It's the efficiency that we think that we can get out of our systems to keep the same labor force that we have today and be, you know, one and a half times the size. That is the real goal. Back to your, Howard, that you love to point out, you know, that 5-3-2, this is what I talked about.
Speaker #6: And that is the real goal. And back to your, Howard, that you love to point out, that 5-3-2. And this is what I talked about our SKOs, both in the US and Europe.
[Company Representative] (Climb Global Solutions): Yeah.
Howard Root: Yeah.
Dale Foster: our SKOs, both in the US and in Europe, and it's like, how can I move my 3 to 2.5 and my 2 to 2.5, right? That I can split the profit and the cost or the SG&A to a 50/50, which I think is our goal and has been our goal for the last couple of years. It is gonna be about efficiencies. Of course, AI is heavy into our company right now doing that, but we look at it as a generative AI, which it just makes everybody more efficient, so we can expand and do more with our top vendors.
Dale Foster: our SKOs, both in the US and in Europe, and it's like, how can I move my 3 to 2.5 and my 2 to 2.5, right? That I can split the profit and the cost or the SG&A to a 50/50, which I think is our goal and has been our goal for the last couple of years. It is gonna be about efficiencies. Of course, AI is heavy into our company right now doing that, but we look at it as a generative AI, which it just makes everybody more efficient, so we can expand and do more with our top vendors.
Speaker #6: And they say, "How can I move my 3 to 2 and a half and my 2 to 2 and a half?" Right? So that I can split the profit and the cost or the SG&A to a 50-50, which I think is our goal and has been our goal for the last couple of years.
Speaker #6: But it is going to be about efficiencies. Of course, AI is heavy into our company right now doing that. But we look at it as a generative AI, which it just makes everybody more efficient so we can expand and do more with our top vendors.
Speaker #10: Great. Well, thanks for the explanation. And thanks for continuing to make great progress in 2025.
[Company Representative] (Climb Global Solutions): Great. Well, thanks for the explanation, and thanks for continuing to make great progress in 2025.
Howard Root: Great. Well, thanks for the explanation, and thanks for continuing to make great progress in 2025.
Speaker #6: Yeah. Thanks, Howard.
Dale Foster: Yeah. Thanks, Howard.
Dale Foster: Yeah. Thanks, Howard.
Sean Mansouri: Thank you. At this time, there are no further questions in the queue. I will now turn the meeting back over to Mr. Dale Foster.
Operator: Thank you. At this time, there are no further questions in the queue. I will now turn the meeting back over to Mr. Dale Foster.
Speaker #1: Thank you. At this time, there are no further questions in the queue. I will now turn the meeting back over to Mr. Dale Foster.
Dale Foster: Thank you to our shareholders, board, and all the Climb team members, you know, I just want to welcome our new Greek team on board. We had our first kickoff in town hall yesterday with the team. Look forward to everybody being able to meet each other like I have over the last couple of years. With that, we'll conclude the call. Thank you.
Speaker #6: Thank you, Tor, shareholders, board, and all the Climb team members. And I just want to welcome our new Greek team on board. We had our first kickoff in town hall yesterday.
Dale Foster: Thank you to our shareholders, board, and all the Climb team members, you know, I just want to welcome our new Greek team on board. We had our first kickoff in town hall yesterday with the team. Look forward to everybody being able to meet each other like I have over the last couple of years. With that, we'll conclude the call. Thank you.
Speaker #6: With the team look forward to everybody being able to meet each other like I have over the last couple of years. And with that, we'll conclude the call.
Speaker #6: Thank you.
Sean Mansouri: Thank you. This brings us to the end of today's meeting. We appreciate your time and participation. You may now disconnect.
Operator: Thank you. This brings us to the end of today's meeting. We appreciate your time and participation. You may now disconnect.