Q4 2026 DocuSign Inc Earnings Call

Operator: Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen, and thank you for joining DocuSign's Q4 Fiscal 2026 Earnings Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. After the speaker's presentation, there will be a question-and-answer session. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded and will be available for replay on the investor relations section of the website following the call. If anyone should require operator assistance during the conference, please press star zero on your telephone keypad. I will now pass the call over to Matthew Sonefeldt, Head of Investor Relations. Thank you. You may begin.

Speaker #2: After the speaker's presentation, there will be a question-and-answer session. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded and will be available for replay on the Investor Relations section of the website following the call.

Speaker #2: If anyone should require operator assistance during the conference, please press star zero on your telephone keypad. I will now pass the call over to Matthew Schoenfeldt, head of Investor Relations.

Speaker #2: Thank you. You may begin. Thank you, operator. Good afternoon, and welcome to DocuSign's Q4 fiscal 2026 earnings call. Joining me on today's call are DocuSign CEO, Allan Thygesen, and CFO, Blake Grayson.

Matthew Sonefeldt: Thank you, operator. Good afternoon, and welcome to DocuSign's Q4 fiscal 2026 earnings call. Joining me on today's call are DocuSign CEO, Allan Thygesen, and CFO, Blake Grayson. The press release announcing our Q4 fiscal 2026 results was issued earlier today and is posted on our investor relations website, along with a published version of our prepared remarks. Before we begin, let me remind everyone that some of our statements on today's call are forward-looking, including any statements regarding future performance. We believe our assumptions and expectations related to these forward-looking statements are reasonable, but they are subject to known and unknown risks and uncertainties that may cause our actual results or performance to be materially different. In particular, our expectations regarding factors affecting customer demand and adoption are based on our best estimates at this time and are therefore subject to change.

Matthew Sonefeldt: Thank you, operator. Good afternoon, and welcome to DocuSign's Q4 fiscal 2026 earnings call. Joining me on today's call are DocuSign CEO, Allan Thygesen, and CFO, Blake Grayson. The press release announcing our Q4 fiscal 2026 results was issued earlier today and is posted on our investor relations website, along with a published version of our prepared remarks. Before we begin, let me remind everyone that some of our statements on today's call are forward-looking, including any statements regarding future performance. We believe our assumptions and expectations related to these forward-looking statements are reasonable, but they are subject to known and unknown risks and uncertainties that may cause our actual results or performance to be materially different. In particular, our expectations regarding factors affecting customer demand and adoption are based on our best estimates at this time and are therefore subject to change.

Speaker #2: The press release announcing our fourth quarter fiscal 2026 results was issued earlier today and is posted on our Investor Relations website along with the published version of our prepared remarks.

Speaker #2: Before we begin, let me remind everyone that some of our statements on today's call are forward-looking, including any statements regarding future performance. We believe our assumptions and expectations related to these forward-looking statements are reasonable, but they are subject to known and unknown risks and uncertainties that may cause our actual results or performance to be materially different.

Speaker #2: In particular, our expectations regarding factors affecting customer demand and adoption are based on our best estimates at this time, and are therefore subject to change.

Speaker #2: Please read and consider the risk factors in our filings with the SEC together with the content of this call. Any forward-looking statements are based on our assumptions and expectations to date.

Matthew Sonefeldt: Please read and consider the risk factors in our filings with the SEC, together with the content of this call. Any forward-looking statements are based on our assumptions and expectations to date, and except as required by law, we assume no obligation to update these statements in light of future events or new information. During this call, we will present GAAP and non-GAAP financial measures. In addition, we provide non-GAAP weighted average share counts and information regarding free cash flows, billings, and ARR. These non-GAAP measures are not intended to be considered in isolation or as a substitute for, or superior to, our GAAP results. We encourage you to consider all measures when analyzing our performance.

Matthew Sonefeldt: Please read and consider the risk factors in our filings with the SEC, together with the content of this call. Any forward-looking statements are based on our assumptions and expectations to date, and except as required by law, we assume no obligation to update these statements in light of future events or new information. During this call, we will present GAAP and non-GAAP financial measures. In addition, we provide non-GAAP weighted average share counts and information regarding free cash flows, billings, and ARR. These non-GAAP measures are not intended to be considered in isolation or as a substitute for, or superior to, our GAAP results. We encourage you to consider all measures when analyzing our performance.

Speaker #2: And except as required by law, we assume no obligation to update these statements in light of future events or new information. During this call, we will present gap and non-gap financial measures.

Speaker #2: In addition, we provide non-gap weighted average share counts and information regarding free cash flows, billings, and ARR. These non-gap measures are not intended

Speaker #1: Needed to be considered in isolation from a substitute for or superior to our GAAP results . We encourage you to consider all measures when analyzing our performance .

Speaker #1: For information regarding our non-GAAP financial information , the most directly comparable GAAP measures and a quantitative reconciliation of those figures , please refer to today's earnings press release , which can be found on our website at investor dot com I'd now like to turn the call over to Alan

Matthew Sonefeldt: For information regarding our non-GAAP financial information, the most directly comparable GAAP measures, and a quantitative reconciliation of those figures, please refer to today's earnings press release, which can be found on our website at investor.docusign.com. I'd now like to turn the call over to Allan.

Matthew Sonefeldt: For information regarding our non-GAAP financial information, the most directly comparable GAAP measures, and a quantitative reconciliation of those figures, please refer to today's earnings press release, which can be found on our website at investor.docusign.com. I'd now like to turn the call over to Allan.

Speaker #2: Thank you , Matt , and good afternoon , everyone In fiscal 2026 , DOCUSIGN, INC. AI native Intelligent Agreement Management , or IAM platform established clear market leadership as the agreement system of action for companies of all sizes After just 18 months , IAM customers are generating over $350 million in AR and delivering strong retention and expansion .

Allan Thygesen: Thank you, Matt, and good afternoon, everyone. In fiscal 2026, DocuSign's AI native Intelligent Agreement Management, or IAM platform, established clear market leadership as the agreement system of action for companies of all sizes. After just 18 months, IAM customers are generating over $350 million in ARR and delivering strong retention and expansion. We're proud of the improvements in product, go-to-market, and operational execution over the past 3 years that have led us to this inflection point. We are positioned to begin accelerating the business. Fiscal 2026 was defined by consistent execution, positioning us for durable long-term growth. In Q4, revenue was $837 million, up 8% year-over-year, while billings exceeded $1 billion for the first time, growing 10% year-over-year. ARR ended at $3.3 billion, up 8% year-over-year.

Allan Thygesen: Thank you, Matt, and good afternoon, everyone. In fiscal 2026, DocuSign's AI native Intelligent Agreement Management, or IAM platform, established clear market leadership as the agreement system of action for companies of all sizes. After just 18 months, IAM customers are generating over $350 million in ARR and delivering strong retention and expansion. We're proud of the improvements in product, go-to-market, and operational execution over the past 3 years that have led us to this inflection point. We are positioned to begin accelerating the business. Fiscal 2026 was defined by consistent execution, positioning us for durable long-term growth. In Q4, revenue was $837 million, up 8% year-over-year, while billings exceeded $1 billion for the first time, growing 10% year-over-year. ARR ended at $3.3 billion, up 8% year-over-year.

Speaker #2: We're proud of the improvements in product . Go to market and operational execution over the past three years that have led us to this inflection point .

Speaker #2: We are positioned to begin accelerating the business . Fiscal 2026 was defined by consistent execution , positioning us for durable , long term growth in Q4 , revenue was 837 million , up 8% year over year , while billings exceeded 1 billion for the first time , growing 10% year over year .

Speaker #2: IRR ended at $3.3 billion, up 8% year over year. I am represented 11% of AR. Fiscal 2026 was our first year with non-GAAP operating margins over 30%, and free cash flow over $1 billion in fiscal 2027.

Allan Thygesen: IAM represented 11% of ARR. Fiscal 2026 was our first year with non-GAAP operating margins over 30% and free cash flow over $1 billion. In fiscal 2027, we expect to maintain operating margins at a similar level as we reinvest go-to-market efficiencies into increased R&D investment to accelerate our roadmap. We will also leverage strong cash flow generation to support our repurchase program, which we have expanded to $2.6 billion. In fiscal 2027, we're focused on two priorities to grow IAM. First, helping customers automate workflows and drive business results. Second, expanding our AI data and innovation advantage. IAM is an AI native end-to-end platform that transforms how customers manage agreements across every part of an organization.

Allan Thygesen: IAM represented 11% of ARR. Fiscal 2026 was our first year with non-GAAP operating margins over 30% and free cash flow over $1 billion. In fiscal 2027, we expect to maintain operating margins at a similar level as we reinvest go-to-market efficiencies into increased R&D investment to accelerate our roadmap. We will also leverage strong cash flow generation to support our repurchase program, which we have expanded to $2.6 billion. In fiscal 2027, we're focused on two priorities to grow IAM. First, helping customers automate workflows and drive business results. Second, expanding our AI data and innovation advantage. IAM is an AI native end-to-end platform that transforms how customers manage agreements across every part of an organization.

Speaker #2: We expect to maintain operating margins at a similar level as we reinvest go-to-market efficiencies into increased R&D investment to accelerate our roadmap.

Speaker #2: We will also leverage strong cash flow generation to support our repurchase program , which we have expanded to $2.6 billion in fiscal 2027 .

Speaker #2: We're focused on two priorities to grow IAM: first, helping customers automate workflows and drive business results; and second, expanding our AI, data, and innovation advantage.

Speaker #2: I am is an AI native , end to end platform that transforms how customers manage agreements across every part of an organization in the front office .

Allan Thygesen: In the front office, sales workflows connect to legal, finance, and operations teams while also integrating with CRM platforms, enabling customers to close deals faster, deliver a better customer experience, and gain meaningful top-line benefits. In the back office, IAM's extraction and analysis capabilities enable a CFO in procurement use cases or a general counsel in legal use cases to better manage vendor relationships and gain previously unattainable insights into the business across hundreds of thousands of documents using IAM as a system of action. Aon, a leading global professional services firm, is implementing DocuSign's Intelligent Agreement Management to surface intelligence buried in its legacy agreements and delivered through Aon's Meridian capability, equipping colleagues with the clarity they need to serve clients more effectively. Bank of Queensland signed a three-year strategic agreement and upgraded to IAM through the Microsoft Azure Marketplace.

Allan Thygesen: In the front office, sales workflows connect to legal, finance, and operations teams while also integrating with CRM platforms, enabling customers to close deals faster, deliver a better customer experience, and gain meaningful top-line benefits. In the back office, IAM's extraction and analysis capabilities enable a CFO in procurement use cases or a general counsel in legal use cases to better manage vendor relationships and gain previously unattainable insights into the business across hundreds of thousands of documents using IAM as a system of action. Aon, a leading global professional services firm, is implementing DocuSign's Intelligent Agreement Management to surface intelligence buried in its legacy agreements and delivered through Aon's Meridian capability, equipping colleagues with the clarity they need to serve clients more effectively. Bank of Queensland signed a three-year strategic agreement and upgraded to IAM through the Microsoft Azure Marketplace.

Speaker #2: Sales workflows connect to legal , finance , and operations teams , while also integrating with CRM platforms , enabling customers to close deals faster , deliver a better customer experience , and gain meaningful top line benefits in the back office .

Speaker #2: IMS extraction and analysis capabilities enable a CFO and procurement use cases or general counsel and legal use cases to better manage vendor relationships and gain previously unattainable insights into the business .

Speaker #2: Across hundreds of thousands of documents . Using Im as a system of action , Aion , a leading global professional services firm , is implementing DocuSign Intelligent Agreement Management to surface intelligence buried in its legacy agreements and delivered through Aon's Meridian capability , equipping colleagues with the clarity they need to serve clients or effectively .

Speaker #2: Bank of Queensland signed a three-year strategic agreement and upgraded to IIM through the Microsoft Azure Marketplace. By leveraging our global partnership, Bank of Queensland will accelerate its digital transformation, streamline agreement workflows to reduce their cost to serve, improve speed to market, and strengthen regulatory controls through deeper integration.

Allan Thygesen: By leveraging our global partnership, Bank of Queensland will accelerate its digital transformation, streamline agreement workflows to reduce their cost to serve, improve speed to market, and strengthen regulatory controls through deeper Microsoft integration. IM is now the center of gravity across our direct sales, partner, and product-led growth motions. Building on significant commercial momentum, in fiscal 2027, we will scale IM with enterprises by adding a top-down C-suite-focused sales motion. We're launching IM consumption-based subscription pricing in Q1. Our partner channel is increasingly emphasizing IM and made an improved contribution to our direct business in Q4, with total partner contributed bookings growing by over 30% year-over-year. Our product strategy is also focused on delivering more use case value across organizations and enterprises.

Allan Thygesen: By leveraging our global partnership, Bank of Queensland will accelerate its digital transformation, streamline agreement workflows to reduce their cost to serve, improve speed to market, and strengthen regulatory controls through deeper Microsoft integration. IM is now the center of gravity across our direct sales, partner, and product-led growth motions. Building on significant commercial momentum, in fiscal 2027, we will scale IM with enterprises by adding a top-down C-suite-focused sales motion. We're launching IM consumption-based subscription pricing in Q1. Our partner channel is increasingly emphasizing IM and made an improved contribution to our direct business in Q4, with total partner contributed bookings growing by over 30% year-over-year. Our product strategy is also focused on delivering more use case value across organizations and enterprises.

Speaker #2: Microsoft integration I am is now the center of gravity across our direct sales partner and product led growth motions . Building on significant commercial momentum in fiscal 2027 , we will scale Im with enterprises by adding a top down C-suite focused sales motion .

Speaker #2: We're launching . I am consumption based subscription pricing in Q1 . Our partner channel is increasingly emphasizing Im and made an improved contribution to our direct business in Q4 , with total partner contributed bookings growing by over 30% year over year .

Speaker #2: Our product strategy is also focused on delivering more use case value across organizations and enterprises . In fiscal 2027 , IAM will cover more surface area for our customers by introducing new IAM SKUs for specific functions within companies , including IAM for HR and procurement .

Allan Thygesen: In fiscal 2027, IAM will cover more surface area for our customers by introducing new IAM SKUs for specific functions within companies, including IAM for HR and procurement. We're also building richer agentic tools for legal teams. This complements existing SKUs for sales and customer experience. We will continue to strengthen trust and compliance functionality through deeper permissioning, access management, and auditing, as well as expanded IAM extensibility to more enterprise-focused third-party public and private applications. Recently launched AI-powered tools bolster IAM's workflow capabilities. Agreement Desk, agreement preparation, and AI-assisted review streamline agreement creation. Workspaces and identity verification speed up secure agreement commitment. Custom extractions and Skim for DocuSign deliver sophisticated scalable capabilities that enterprise customers require. You can see these in action in our demo videos found in the prepared remarks. eSignature remains a thriving part of our platform vision.

Allan Thygesen: In fiscal 2027, IAM will cover more surface area for our customers by introducing new IAM SKUs for specific functions within companies, including IAM for HR and procurement. We're also building richer agentic tools for legal teams. This complements existing SKUs for sales and customer experience. We will continue to strengthen trust and compliance functionality through deeper permissioning, access management, and auditing, as well as expanded IAM extensibility to more enterprise-focused third-party public and private applications. Recently launched AI-powered tools bolster IAM's workflow capabilities. Agreement Desk, agreement preparation, and AI-assisted review streamline agreement creation. Workspaces and identity verification speed up secure agreement commitment. Custom extractions and Skim for DocuSign deliver sophisticated scalable capabilities that enterprise customers require. You can see these in action in our demo videos found in the prepared remarks. eSignature remains a thriving part of our platform vision.

Speaker #2: We're also building richer agentic tools for legal teams . This complements existing SKUs for sales and customer experience . We will continue to strengthen trust and compliance functionality through deeper permissioning access management and auditing , as well as expanded IAM extensibility to more enterprise focused third party public and private applications .

Speaker #2: Recently launched AI powered tools bolster IMS workflow capabilities , agreement desk agreement preparation , and AI assisted review streamline agreement creation , workspaces and identity verification .

Speaker #2: Speed up secure agreement commitment and custom extractions , and skim for DocuSign . Deliver sophisticated , scalable capabilities that enterprise customers require . You can see these in action in our demo videos found in the prepared remarks .

Speaker #2: E-Signature remains a thriving part of our platform vision . In Q4 , we added AI capabilities to e-signature that make every step of the signing process smarter and more trustworthy .

Allan Thygesen: In Q4, we added AI capabilities to eSignature that make every step of the signing process smarter and more trustworthy. We continue to see consistent year-over-year growth in the eSignature base, especially among customers spending $300,000 or more a year. Q4 envelope consumption once again increased year-over-year at near multi-year highs, while growth in envelopes sent remains healthy and consistent. Our focus on improving sales engagement and reducing customer friction delivered year-over-year improvements in gross and dollar net retention. 3 years ago, we recognized that AI would transform how agreements are managed, and we began building the AI-native platform that became IAM. We believe that agreement management was a natural extension of DocuSign's business and that we had unique competitive advantages.

Allan Thygesen: In Q4, we added AI capabilities to eSignature that make every step of the signing process smarter and more trustworthy. We continue to see consistent year-over-year growth in the eSignature base, especially among customers spending $300,000 or more a year. Q4 envelope consumption once again increased year-over-year at near multi-year highs, while growth in envelopes sent remains healthy and consistent. Our focus on improving sales engagement and reducing customer friction delivered year-over-year improvements in gross and dollar net retention. 3 years ago, we recognized that AI would transform how agreements are managed, and we began building the AI-native platform that became IAM. We believe that agreement management was a natural extension of DocuSign's business and that we had unique competitive advantages.

Speaker #2: We continue to see consistent year over year growth in the e-signature base , especially among customers spending 300,000 or more year . Q4 envelope consumption once again increased year over year at near multi-year highs , while growth in envelopes sent remains healthy and consistent , our focus on improving sales engagement and reducing customer friction delivered year over year improvements in gross and dollar net retention Three years ago , we recognized that AI would transform how agreements are managed and we began building the AI native platform that became Im .

Speaker #2: We believe that agreement management was a natural extension of DocuSign, Inc.'s business, and that we had unique, competitive advantages. These include a deep understanding of customer agreement workflows and context.

Allan Thygesen: These include a deep understanding of customer agreement workflows and context, a large ecosystem with more than 1,100 integrations, market-leading security and compliance, and customer trust and distribution relationships built over decades with companies around the world. Our AI data advantage continues to grow as customers invest in IAM. Today, the number of private consented agreements ingested has expanded to more than 200 million agreements in DocuSign Navigator, our intelligent repository, up from 150 million in December. AI search leader Elastic is deploying Navigator to automate contract workflows across the business, while fintech leader Clasp is leveraging Navigator and our suite of app extensions to automate agreement workflows and centralize its contract data. DocuSign AI models draw upon an enormous, unmatched body of agreement data gathered over two decades.

Allan Thygesen: These include a deep understanding of customer agreement workflows and context, a large ecosystem with more than 1,100 integrations, market-leading security and compliance, and customer trust and distribution relationships built over decades with companies around the world. Our AI data advantage continues to grow as customers invest in IAM. Today, the number of private consented agreements ingested has expanded to more than 200 million agreements in DocuSign Navigator, our intelligent repository, up from 150 million in December. AI search leader Elastic is deploying Navigator to automate contract workflows across the business, while fintech leader Clasp is leveraging Navigator and our suite of app extensions to automate agreement workflows and centralize its contract data. DocuSign AI models draw upon an enormous, unmatched body of agreement data gathered over two decades.

Speaker #2: A large ecosystem with more than 100 integrations , market leading security and compliance , and customer trust , and distribution relationships built over decades with companies around the world .

Speaker #2: Our AI data advantage continues to grow as customers invest in Im . Today , the number of private consented agreements ingested as expanded to more than 200 million agreements in DocuSign , navigator , our intelligent repository , up from 150 million in December .

Speaker #2: AI search leader elastic is deploying navigator to automate contract workflows across the business , while fintech leader clasp is leveraging navigator and our suite of app extensions to automate agreement workflows and centralize its contract data , DocuSign AI models draw upon an enormous , unmatched body of agreement data gathered over two decades by leveraging our customer consented library of private contracts , we believe we can achieve up to a 15 percentage point improvement in precision and recall compared to our models trained on public contract data while operating at incredible cost efficiency .

Allan Thygesen: By leveraging our customer-consented library of private contracts, we believe we can achieve up to a 15 percentage point improvement in precision and recall compared to our models trained on public contract data while operating at incredible cost efficiency. We've optimized AI processing costs by upwards of 50x compared to running direct prompts on LLMs. We further extend our AI advantage by directly integrating with the leading AI providers. Last month, we partnered directly with Anthropic to make IAM available as part of Claude Cowork. The DocuSign MCP connector is available in beta today through Anthropic's connectors directory. It enables DocuSign customers to use Cowork's natural language prompts to automate agreement workflows and securely create, review, send, and manage agreements in IAM, all with DocuSign's trusted security and access controls.

Allan Thygesen: By leveraging our customer-consented library of private contracts, we believe we can achieve up to a 15 percentage point improvement in precision and recall compared to our models trained on public contract data while operating at incredible cost efficiency. We've optimized AI processing costs by upwards of 50x compared to running direct prompts on LLMs. We further extend our AI advantage by directly integrating with the leading AI providers. Last month, we partnered directly with Anthropic to make IAM available as part of Claude Cowork. The DocuSign MCP connector is available in beta today through Anthropic's connectors directory. It enables DocuSign customers to use Cowork's natural language prompts to automate agreement workflows and securely create, review, send, and manage agreements in IAM, all with DocuSign's trusted security and access controls.

Speaker #2: We've optimized AI processing costs by upwards of 50 X compared to running direct prompts on LMS . We further extend our AI advantage by directly integrating with the leading AI providers .

Speaker #2: Last month , we partnered directly with anthropic to make IAM available as part of cloud Cowork . The DocuSign MCP connector is available in beta today through anthropic connectors directory .

Speaker #2: It enables DocuSign customers to use coworkers' natural language prompts to automate agreement workflows and securely create, review, send, and manage agreements in email, all with DocuSign's trusted security and access controls.

Speaker #2: In addition to Cowork , I am also connects via MCP server to OpenAI's ChatGPT , Google Gemini , GitHub copilot , copilot Studio and Salesforce's agent force .

Allan Thygesen: In addition to Claude Cowork, IAM also connects via MCP server to OpenAI's ChatGPT, Google Gemini, GitHub Copilot, Microsoft Copilot Studio, and Salesforce's Agentforce. IAM's ability to integrate with customer workflows and third-party applications delivers significant value to our customers. Leading venture-backed fintech company Vestwell connected IAM to its CRM and reduced the time required to create a new customer agreement package from 75 minutes to 5 minutes. Move Forward Financial, a real estate lender, is saving money and delivering a better customer experience by using IAM for Sales. Payworks, a Canadian developer of workforce management software, increased 24-hour contract completion rates from 55% to 87% and recovered more than $400,000 in annual sales representative productivity by integrating IAM workflows with a complex Salesforce implementation. Inside DocuSign, we're adopting AI across the organization, deploying new tools and enablement programs to boost productivity and gain efficiencies.

Allan Thygesen: In addition to Claude Cowork, IAM also connects via MCP server to OpenAI's ChatGPT, Google Gemini, GitHub Copilot, Microsoft Copilot Studio, and Salesforce's Agentforce. IAM's ability to integrate with customer workflows and third-party applications delivers significant value to our customers. Leading venture-backed fintech company Vestwell connected IAM to its CRM and reduced the time required to create a new customer agreement package from 75 minutes to 5 minutes. Move Forward Financial, a real estate lender, is saving money and delivering a better customer experience by using IAM for Sales. Payworks, a Canadian developer of workforce management software, increased 24-hour contract completion rates from 55% to 87% and recovered more than $400,000 in annual sales representative productivity by integrating IAM workflows with a complex Salesforce implementation. Inside DocuSign, we're adopting AI across the organization, deploying new tools and enablement programs to boost productivity and gain efficiencies.

Speaker #2: I Am's ability to integrate with workflows and third-party applications delivers significant value to our customers. Leading venture-backed fintech company Vestwell connected I Am to its CRM and reduced the time required to create a new customer agreement package.

Speaker #2: 75 minutes to 5 minutes move forward financial or real estate lender is saving money and delivering a better customer experience by using Im for sales pay works .

Speaker #2: A Canadian developer, Workforce Management Software, increased 24-hour contract completion rates from 55% to 87%, and recovered more than $400,000 in annual sales.

Speaker #2: Representative productivity by integrating IAM workflows with a complex Salesforce implementation inside DocuSign , we're adopting AI across the organization , deploying new tools and enablement programs to boost productivity and gain efficiencies .

Speaker #2: The vast majority of our engineering organization is developing with AI , and 60% of new code is AI assisted in closing , we're proud of the immense value I am delivers to customers by enabling them to build sophisticated and efficient agreement workflows and unlock the power of the data in their agreements .

Allan Thygesen: The vast majority of our engineering organization is developing with AI, and 60% of new code is AI-assisted. In closing, we're proud of the immense value IAM delivers to customers by enabling them to build sophisticated and efficient agreement workflows and unlock the power of the data in their agreements. DocuSign IAM has emerged as the category-leading agreement management platform and puts DocuSign at the leading edge of AI innovation. I want to thank the entire DocuSign team for their dedication to helping our customers move faster, grow their businesses, and operate more efficiently, all while transforming DocuSign into a durable, long-term growth business. With that, let me turn it over to Blake.

Allan Thygesen: The vast majority of our engineering organization is developing with AI, and 60% of new code is AI-assisted. In closing, we're proud of the immense value IAM delivers to customers by enabling them to build sophisticated and efficient agreement workflows and unlock the power of the data in their agreements. DocuSign IAM has emerged as the category-leading agreement management platform and puts DocuSign at the leading edge of AI innovation. I want to thank the entire DocuSign team for their dedication to helping our customers move faster, grow their businesses, and operate more efficiently, all while transforming DocuSign into a durable, long-term growth business. With that, let me turn it over to Blake.

Speaker #2: DocuSign Im has emerged as the category leading agreement management platform and puts DocuSign at the leading edge of AI innovation . I want to thank the entire DocuSign team for their dedication to helping our customers move faster , grow their businesses , and operate more efficiently , all while transforming DocuSign into a durable , long term growth business .

Speaker #2: With that, let me turn it over to Blake.

Speaker #3: Thanks , Allen , and good afternoon , everyone . Fiscal 2026 represented a critical year for DocuSign . As we continued our transformation , leveraging our recognized leading position amongst the world's most trusted software companies to help customers realize value from their full repository of agreements through IAM .

Blake Grayson: Thanks, Allan, and good afternoon, everyone. Fiscal 2026 represented a critical year for DocuSign as we continued our transformation, leveraging our recognized leading position among the world's most trusted software companies to help customers realize value from their full repository of agreements through IAM. With 1.8 million customers representing most large enterprises, mid-market companies, and over 1.5 million small businesses, we are in a unique position to provide the insights, productivity, and velocity companies need to improve their performance, particularly via leveraging AI. Fiscal 2026 was both our first full year integrating IAM into our business as our primary growth driver and our first year generating over $1 billion in free cash flow. We are proud of the progress we've made over the past three years and aspire to even greater gains in the future.

Blake Grayson: Thanks, Allan, and good afternoon, everyone. Fiscal 2026 represented a critical year for DocuSign as we continued our transformation, leveraging our recognized leading position among the world's most trusted software companies to help customers realize value from their full repository of agreements through IAM. With 1.8 million customers representing most large enterprises, mid-market companies, and over 1.5 million small businesses, we are in a unique position to provide the insights, productivity, and velocity companies need to improve their performance, particularly via leveraging AI. Fiscal 2026 was both our first full year integrating IAM into our business as our primary growth driver and our first year generating over $1 billion in free cash flow. We are proud of the progress we've made over the past three years and aspire to even greater gains in the future.

Speaker #3: With 1.8 million customers representing most large enterprises , mid-market companies , and over 1.5 million small businesses , we are in a unique position to provide the insights , productivity and velocity companies need to improve their performance , particularly via leveraging AI .

Speaker #3: Fiscal 2026 was both our first full year integrating IAM into our business as our primary growth driver, and our first year generating over $1 billion in free cash flow.

Speaker #3: We are proud of the progress we've made over the past three years , and aspire to even greater gains in the future . Q4 total revenue was 837 million , and subscription revenue was 819 million .

Blake Grayson: Q4 total revenue was $837 million, and subscription revenue was $819 million, both up 8% year-over-year. For the full year fiscal 2026, total revenue was $3.2 billion, up 8% year-over-year, and subscription revenue was also $3.2 billion, up 9% year-over-year. Revenue in Q4 and for the full year benefited from approximately 80 basis points and 20 basis points year-over-year respectively from foreign exchange rates. Additionally, as discussed in prior quarters, fiscal 2026 revenue also had a slight tailwind from digital add-ons that launched in late fiscal 2025. Our annual recurring revenue, or ARR, grew 8% year-over-year in fiscal 2026 to nearly $3.3 billion. This is consistent with our fiscal 2025 ARR growth rate of 8% year-over-year.

Blake Grayson: Q4 total revenue was $837 million, and subscription revenue was $819 million, both up 8% year-over-year. For the full year fiscal 2026, total revenue was $3.2 billion, up 8% year-over-year, and subscription revenue was also $3.2 billion, up 9% year-over-year. Revenue in Q4 and for the full year benefited from approximately 80 basis points and 20 basis points year-over-year respectively from foreign exchange rates. Additionally, as discussed in prior quarters, fiscal 2026 revenue also had a slight tailwind from digital add-ons that launched in late fiscal 2025. Our annual recurring revenue, or ARR, grew 8% year-over-year in fiscal 2026 to nearly $3.3 billion. This is consistent with our fiscal 2025 ARR growth rate of 8% year-over-year.

Speaker #3: Both up 8% year over year . For the full year fiscal 2026 , total revenue was 3.2 billion , up 8% year over year , and subscription revenue was also 3.2 billion , up 9% year over year .

Speaker #3: Revenue in Q4, and for the full year, benefited from approximately 80 basis points and 20 basis points year over year, respectively, from foreign exchange rates.

Speaker #3: Additionally , as discussed in prior quarters , fiscal 2026 , revenue also had a slight tailwind from digital add ons that launched in late fiscal 2025 .

Speaker #3: Our annual recurring revenue , or IRR , grew 8% year over year in fiscal 2026 to nearly 3.3 billion . This is consistent with our fiscal 2025 IRR growth rate of 8% year over year .

Speaker #3: IRR growth this year was driven by accelerating gross new bookings , primarily from IAM customers , as well as growth retention improvements . Our IRR growth in fiscal 2025 was driven predominantly by gross retention as we made sizable gains that year .

Blake Grayson: ARR growth this year was driven by accelerating gross new bookings, primarily from IAM customers, as well as gross retention improvements. Our ARR growth in fiscal 2025 was driven predominantly by gross retention as we made sizable gains that year. We're excited about the opportunity to accelerate our ARR growth in fiscal 2027 as we continue to become an even more valuable partner to our customers. As a reminder, and as detailed in our filings, ARR is calculated using fixed exchange rates set at the start of the fiscal year. Billings for Q4 were up 10% year-over-year and exceeded $1 billion for the first time in DocuSign's history. Approximately half of the Q4 billings outperformance relative to our guidance was driven by timing, with the remainder from FX and bookings.

Blake Grayson: ARR growth this year was driven by accelerating gross new bookings, primarily from IAM customers, as well as gross retention improvements. Our ARR growth in fiscal 2025 was driven predominantly by gross retention as we made sizable gains that year. We're excited about the opportunity to accelerate our ARR growth in fiscal 2027 as we continue to become an even more valuable partner to our customers. As a reminder, and as detailed in our filings, ARR is calculated using fixed exchange rates set at the start of the fiscal year. Billings for Q4 were up 10% year-over-year and exceeded $1 billion for the first time in DocuSign's history. Approximately half of the Q4 billings outperformance relative to our guidance was driven by timing, with the remainder from FX and bookings.

Speaker #3: We're excited about the opportunity to accelerate our IRR growth in fiscal 2027, as we continue to become an even more valuable partner to our customers.

Speaker #3: As a reminder and as detailed in our filings , IRR is calculated using fixed exchange rate set at the start of the fiscal year .

Speaker #3: Billings for Q4 were up 10% year over year , and exceeded $1 billion for the first time in DOCUSIGN, INC. history . Approximately half of the Q4 billings outperformance relative to our guidance was driven by timing , with the remainder from FX and bookings for the full year fiscal 2026 .

Blake Grayson: For the full year fiscal 2026, billings were $3.4 billion, also up 10% year-over-year. Billings in Q4 and for the full year benefited by approximately 2.3% and 1.1% year-over-year, respectively, from foreign exchange rates. As a reminder, this quarter will be the last time we report on billings as a top-line metric as we shift to discussing ARR going forward. Please see slide 29 in our Q4 earnings deck for a full summary of our top-line metrics changes. The underlying foundation of our business remains durable and healthy. Our dollar net retention rate, or DNR, was 102% in Q4, up from 101% in the prior year, showing moderate sequential improvement over the last six quarters.

Blake Grayson: For the full year fiscal 2026, billings were $3.4 billion, also up 10% year-over-year. Billings in Q4 and for the full year benefited by approximately 2.3% and 1.1% year-over-year, respectively, from foreign exchange rates. As a reminder, this quarter will be the last time we report on billings as a top-line metric as we shift to discussing ARR going forward. Please see slide 29 in our Q4 earnings deck for a full summary of our top-line metrics changes. The underlying foundation of our business remains durable and healthy. Our dollar net retention rate, or DNR, was 102% in Q4, up from 101% in the prior year, showing moderate sequential improvement over the last six quarters.

Speaker #3: Billings were 3.4 billion , also up 10% year over year . Billings in Q4 . And for the full year benefited by approximately 2.3% and 1.1% year over year , respectively , from foreign exchange rates .

Speaker #3: As a reminder , this quarter will be the last time we report on Billings as a top line metric . As we shift to discussing IRR going forward , please see slide 29 .

Speaker #3: In our Q4 earnings deck for a full summary of our top line metrics . Changes the underlying foundation of our business remains durable and healthy .

Speaker #3: Our dollar net retention rate , or DNR , was 102% in Q4 , up from 101% in the prior year , showing moderate sequential improvement over the last six quarters , both consumption , a measure of envelope utilization and the volume of envelope sent in Q4 , continued to improve year over year , with consumption remaining near multi-year highs across customer segments and verticals .

Blake Grayson: Both consumption, a measure of envelope utilization, and the volume of envelopes sent in Q4 continued to improve year-over-year, with consumption remaining near multi-year highs across customer segments and verticals. We are seeing continued strong adoption of our IM platform. In Q4, after just over 18 months from launch, IM represented over $350 million in ARR, or 10.8% of total company ARR, up from 2.3% at the end of fiscal 2025. Although still early, our first IM renewal cohorts are performing better than the company average, and we continue to see adoption rates for IM features climb as users engage with the platform's expanding functionality. In Q4, total customers grew 9% year-over-year to over 1.8 million.

Blake Grayson: Both consumption, a measure of envelope utilization, and the volume of envelopes sent in Q4 continued to improve year-over-year, with consumption remaining near multi-year highs across customer segments and verticals. We are seeing continued strong adoption of our IM platform. In Q4, after just over 18 months from launch, IM represented over $350 million in ARR, or 10.8% of total company ARR, up from 2.3% at the end of fiscal 2025. Although still early, our first IM renewal cohorts are performing better than the company average, and we continue to see adoption rates for IM features climb as users engage with the platform's expanding functionality. In Q4, total customers grew 9% year-over-year to over 1.8 million.

Speaker #3: We are seeing continued strong adoption of our IAM platform in Q4 , and after just over 18 months from launch , I am represented over $350 million in IRR , or 10.8% of total company IRR , up from 2.3% at the end of fiscal 2025 .

Speaker #3: Although still early, our first IAM renewal cohorts are performing better than the company average, and we continue to see adoption rates for IAM features climb as users engage with the platform's expanding functionality.

Speaker #3: In Q4 , total customers grew 9% year over year to over 1.8 million . We ended the quarter with 1205 customers spending over $300,000 annually , a 7% increase year over year .

Blake Grayson: We ended the quarter with 1,205 customers spending over $300,000 annually, a 7% increase year-over-year. International revenue surpassed 30% of total revenue in Q4 and grew 15% year-over-year. Our commitment to operating efficiency delivered strong profitability for the quarter and fiscal 2026. Non-GAAP gross margin for Q4 was 81.8%, down 50 basis points from the prior year due to ongoing costs associated with our cloud infrastructure migration, as discussed throughout the year. For fiscal 2026, non-GAAP gross margin was 82.0%, down 20 basis points on a year-over-year basis, a better result than the anticipated 1 percentage point of headwind in our initial fiscal 2026 guidance, as higher revenue partially offset the cloud migration impact.

Blake Grayson: We ended the quarter with 1,205 customers spending over $300,000 annually, a 7% increase year-over-year. International revenue surpassed 30% of total revenue in Q4 and grew 15% year-over-year. Our commitment to operating efficiency delivered strong profitability for the quarter and fiscal 2026. Non-GAAP gross margin for Q4 was 81.8%, down 50 basis points from the prior year due to ongoing costs associated with our cloud infrastructure migration, as discussed throughout the year. For fiscal 2026, non-GAAP gross margin was 82.0%, down 20 basis points on a year-over-year basis, a better result than the anticipated 1 percentage point of headwind in our initial fiscal 2026 guidance, as higher revenue partially offset the cloud migration impact.

Speaker #3: International revenue surpassed 30% of total revenue in Q4 , and grew 15% year over year . Our commitment to operating efficiency delivered strong profitability for the quarter and fiscal 2026 .

Speaker #3: Non-GAAP gross margin for Q4 was 81.8%, down 50 basis points from the prior year due to ongoing costs associated with our cloud infrastructure migration.

Speaker #3: As discussed throughout the year for fiscal 2026 , non-GAAP gross margin was 82.0% , down 20 basis points on a year over year basis .

Speaker #3: A better result than the anticipated full percentage point of headwind in our initial fiscal 2026 guidance, as higher revenue partially offset the cloud migration impact.

Speaker #3: Non-GAAP operating income for Q4 was $247 million, up 10% year over year. Operating margin was 29.5%, up 70 basis points versus last year.

Blake Grayson: Non-GAAP operating income for Q4 was $247 million, up 10% year-over-year. Operating margin was 29.5%, up 70 basis points versus last year. For the full year, non-GAAP operating income was $968 million, up 9% year-over-year, with full year operating margin reaching 30% in the fiscal year for the first time in our company's history, representing a 30 basis point increase year-over-year. We ended fiscal 2026 with 7,044 employees, up modestly from 6,838 a year ago, as we continue to invest deliberately in roles focused on growing the IAM platform. While we are hiring across all of our global offices, the vast majority of our net new headcount growth has come from, and we expect will continue to be, in lower cost locations.

Blake Grayson: Non-GAAP operating income for Q4 was $247 million, up 10% year-over-year. Operating margin was 29.5%, up 70 basis points versus last year. For the full year, non-GAAP operating income was $968 million, up 9% year-over-year, with full year operating margin reaching 30% in the fiscal year for the first time in our company's history, representing a 30 basis point increase year-over-year. We ended fiscal 2026 with 7,044 employees, up modestly from 6,838 a year ago, as we continue to invest deliberately in roles focused on growing the IAM platform. While we are hiring across all of our global offices, the vast majority of our net new headcount growth has come from, and we expect will continue to be, in lower cost locations.

Speaker #3: For the full year , non-GAAP operating income was 968 million , up 9% year over year , with full year operating margin reaching 30% in the fiscal year for the first time in our company's history , representing a 30 basis point increase year over year , we ended fiscal 2026 with 7044 employees , up modestly from 6838 a year ago .

Speaker #3: As we continue to invest deliberately in roles focused on growing the IAM platform, while we are hiring across all of our global offices, the vast majority of our net new headcount growth has come from, and we expect will continue to be, in lower-cost locations.

Speaker #3: Also, in fiscal 2026, we delivered our first year with over $1 billion of free cash flow, a 33% margin compared to 31% a year prior.

Blake Grayson: Also in fiscal 2026, we delivered our first year with over $1 billion of free cash flow, a 33% margin compared to 31% a year prior. In Q4, we generated $350 million of free cash flow, representing 25% year-over-year growth and a 42% margin. Strength in Q4 was driven primarily by improved collections efficiency as well as higher billing seasonality and the timing of billings. Our balance sheet remains strong. We ended the quarter with approximately 1.1 billion of cash equivalents, and investments. We have no debt on the balance sheet. In Q4, we also increased our buyback activity, repurchasing $269 million in shares. This was our largest quarterly dollar buyback to date.

Blake Grayson: Also in fiscal 2026, we delivered our first year with over $1 billion of free cash flow, a 33% margin compared to 31% a year prior. In Q4, we generated $350 million of free cash flow, representing 25% year-over-year growth and a 42% margin. Strength in Q4 was driven primarily by improved collections efficiency as well as higher billing seasonality and the timing of billings. Our balance sheet remains strong. We ended the quarter with approximately 1.1 billion of cash equivalents, and investments. We have no debt on the balance sheet. In Q4, we also increased our buyback activity, repurchasing $269 million in shares. This was our largest quarterly dollar buyback to date.

Speaker #3: In Q4 , we generated $350 million of free cash flow , representing 25% year over year growth and a 42% margin strength in Q4 was driven primarily by improved collections efficiency as well as higher billing seasonality and the timing of billings .

Speaker #3: Our balance sheet remains strong . We ended the quarter with approximately 1.1 billion of cash , cash equivalents , and investments . We have no debt on the balance sheet in Q4 .

Speaker #3: We also increased our buyback activity , repurchasing $269 million in shares . This was our largest quarterly dollar buyback to date for the full year fiscal 2026 , we repurchased $869 million in stock , representing 82% of our annual free cash flow when including the additional funds used to offset taxes due on RSU vesting .

Blake Grayson: For the full year fiscal 2026, we repurchased $869 million in stock, representing 82% of our annual free cash flow. When including the additional funds used to offset taxes due on RSU vesting, this rate is slightly over 100% for the year. In Q4, we established a 10b5-1 program to repurchase shares before the open window, rather than our typical buybacks that coincide with open trading windows after earnings. This mechanism extends the potential time frame for share buybacks, and we have already repurchased $158 million to date in Q1. In addition, today we announced a $2 billion increase to our repurchase program, bringing our total remaining authorization to $2.6 billion. Our focus continues to be on improving free cash flow generation and redeploying excess capital opportunistically to shareholders.

Blake Grayson: For the full year fiscal 2026, we repurchased $869 million in stock, representing 82% of our annual free cash flow. When including the additional funds used to offset taxes due on RSU vesting, this rate is slightly over 100% for the year. In Q4, we established a 10b5-1 program to repurchase shares before the open window, rather than our typical buybacks that coincide with open trading windows after earnings. This mechanism extends the potential time frame for share buybacks, and we have already repurchased $158 million to date in Q1. In addition, today we announced a $2 billion increase to our repurchase program, bringing our total remaining authorization to $2.6 billion. Our focus continues to be on improving free cash flow generation and redeploying excess capital opportunistically to shareholders.

Speaker #3: This rate is slightly over 100% for the year . In Q4 , we established a ten B 51 program to repurchase shares before the open window , rather than our typical buybacks that coincide with open trading windows .

Speaker #3: After earnings, this mechanism extends the potential timeframe for share buybacks, and we have already repurchased $158 million to date in Q1.

Speaker #3: In addition, today we announced a $2 billion increase to our repurchase program, bringing our total remaining authorization to $2.6 billion. Our focus continues to be on improving free cash flow generation and redeploying excess capital opportunistically to shareholders.

Speaker #3: Non-GAAP diluted EPS for Q4 was $1.01, a $0.15 per share improvement from $0.86 last year. GAAP diluted EPS for Q4 was $0.44 versus $0.39 last year.

Blake Grayson: Non-GAAP diluted EPS for Q4 was $1.01, a $0.15 per share improvement from $0.86 last year. GAAP diluted EPS for Q4 was $0.44 versus $0.39 last year. For fiscal 2026, non-GAAP diluted EPS was $3.84 versus $3.55 in fiscal 2025, and GAAP diluted EPS was $1.48 versus $5.08 last year. As a reminder, GAAP earnings in fiscal 2025 were positively impacted by the tax valuation allowance release that year. In Q4 and fiscal 2026, the buyback program contributed to reducing our share count. Diluted weighted average shares outstanding for Q4 were 204.7 million, a decrease from 214.5 million last year.

Blake Grayson: Non-GAAP diluted EPS for Q4 was $1.01, a $0.15 per share improvement from $0.86 last year. GAAP diluted EPS for Q4 was $0.44 versus $0.39 last year. For fiscal 2026, non-GAAP diluted EPS was $3.84 versus $3.55 in fiscal 2025, and GAAP diluted EPS was $1.48 versus $5.08 last year. As a reminder, GAAP earnings in fiscal 2025 were positively impacted by the tax valuation allowance release that year. In Q4 and fiscal 2026, the buyback program contributed to reducing our share count. Diluted weighted average shares outstanding for Q4 were 204.7 million, a decrease from 214.5 million last year.

Speaker #3: For fiscal 2026, non-GAAP diluted EPS was $3.84 versus $3.55 in fiscal 2025, and GAAP diluted EPS was $1.48 versus $5.08 last year.

Speaker #3: As a reminder, GAAP earnings in fiscal 2025 were positively impacted by the tax valuation allowance release that year in Q4, and in fiscal 2026, the buyback program contributed to reducing our share count.

Speaker #3: Diluted weighted average shares outstanding for Q4 were 204.7 million, a decrease from 214.5 million last year. Basic weighted average shares outstanding for Q4 decreased by 2.8 million year over year to 200.5 million, from 203.3 million.

Blake Grayson: Basic weighted average shares outstanding for Q4 decreased by 2.8 million year-over-year to 200.5 million from 203.3 million total shares. With that, let me turn to guidance. For ARR, we anticipate accelerating growth in fiscal 2027 compared to the prior year. We expect a year-over-year growth rate range of 8.25% to 8.75% or an 8.5% year-over-year increase to $3.551 billion at the midpoint at the end of Q4 fiscal 2027. We expect growth to be driven by gross new bookings, primarily from both new and expanding IAM customers, as well as by gross retention improvements versus fiscal 2026. Related to this, we expect another year of modest improvement in DNR.

Blake Grayson: Basic weighted average shares outstanding for Q4 decreased by 2.8 million year-over-year to 200.5 million from 203.3 million total shares. With that, let me turn to guidance. For ARR, we anticipate accelerating growth in fiscal 2027 compared to the prior year. We expect a year-over-year growth rate range of 8.25% to 8.75% or an 8.5% year-over-year increase to $3.551 billion at the midpoint at the end of Q4 fiscal 2027. We expect growth to be driven by gross new bookings, primarily from both new and expanding IAM customers, as well as by gross retention improvements versus fiscal 2026. Related to this, we expect another year of modest improvement in DNR.

Speaker #3: Total shares with that, let me turn to guidance for RR. We anticipate accelerating growth in fiscal 2027 compared to the prior year.

Speaker #3: We expect a year over year growth rate range of 8.25% to 8.75% , or an 8.5% year over year increase to 3.551 billion at the midpoint .

Speaker #3: At the end of Q4 fiscal 2027, we expect growth to be driven by gross new bookings, primarily from both new and expanding.

Speaker #3: IAM customers, as well as by gross retention improvements versus fiscal 2026. Related to this, we expect another year of modest improvement in DNR.

Speaker #3: We expect IAM to represent approximately 18% of our total IRR at the end of Q4 fiscal 2027, driving IAM to well over $600 million in IRR.

Blake Grayson: We expect IAM to represent approximately 18% of our total ARR at the end of Q4 fiscal 2027, driving IAM to well over $600 million in ARR by the end of this year. This is our first year guiding to ARR, and I want to provide some context on our philosophy and approach around it. Our guidance represents our current best estimates for both total ARR and IAM's trajectory based on the business data and bookings forecast available today. Therefore, we intend to only revise our ARR forecast as our underlying bookings expectations evolve for the entire year, and not necessarily on a quarterly basis. As you are aware, our bookings are seasonally weighted more heavily to the second half of the year, in particular Q4, which is typically our strongest quarter.

Blake Grayson: We expect IAM to represent approximately 18% of our total ARR at the end of Q4 fiscal 2027, driving IAM to well over $600 million in ARR by the end of this year. This is our first year guiding to ARR, and I want to provide some context on our philosophy and approach around it. Our guidance represents our current best estimates for both total ARR and IAM's trajectory based on the business data and bookings forecast available today. Therefore, we intend to only revise our ARR forecast as our underlying bookings expectations evolve for the entire year, and not necessarily on a quarterly basis. As you are aware, our bookings are seasonally weighted more heavily to the second half of the year, in particular Q4, which is typically our strongest quarter.

Speaker #3: By the end of this year. This is our first year guiding to IRR, and I want to provide some context on our philosophy and approach around it.

Speaker #3: Our guidance represents our current best estimates for both total IRR and IAM trajectory, based on the business data and bookings forecast available today.

Speaker #3: Therefore, we intend to only revise our IRR forecasts as our underlying bookings expectations evolve for the entire year, and not necessarily on a quarterly basis.

Speaker #3: As you are aware , our bookings are seasonally weighted more heavily to the second half of the year . In particular Q4 , which typically our strongest quarter as a result , updating our full year IRR forecast will depend on our visibility later into the year , which will take time to achieve for total revenue in the first quarter and fiscal year 2027 , we expect 822 million to 826 million in Q1 , or an 8% year over year increase at the midpoint and 3.484 billion to 3.496 billion for fiscal 2027 , or a 8% year over year increase at the midpoint .

Blake Grayson: As a result, updating our full-year ARR forecast will depend on our visibility later into the year, which will take time to achieve. For total revenue in Q1 and fiscal year 2027, we expect $822 million to $826 million in Q1, or an 8% year-over-year increase at the midpoint, and $3.484 billion to $3.496 billion for fiscal 2027, or an 8% year-over-year increase at the midpoint. After adjusting for impacts from FX and the moderate tailwinds from digital add-ons in fiscal 2026, revenue growth is in line with the prior year. Beginning fiscal year 2027, we will only guide to total revenue, given that subscription revenue has now become the vast majority of our recognized revenue base, specifically 98% of our revenue in fiscal 2026.

Blake Grayson: As a result, updating our full-year ARR forecast will depend on our visibility later into the year, which will take time to achieve. For total revenue in Q1 and fiscal year 2027, we expect $822 million to $826 million in Q1, or an 8% year-over-year increase at the midpoint, and $3.484 billion to $3.496 billion for fiscal 2027, or an 8% year-over-year increase at the midpoint. After adjusting for impacts from FX and the moderate tailwinds from digital add-ons in fiscal 2026, revenue growth is in line with the prior year. Beginning fiscal year 2027, we will only guide to total revenue, given that subscription revenue has now become the vast majority of our recognized revenue base, specifically 98% of our revenue in fiscal 2026.

Speaker #3: After adjusting for impacts from FX and the moderate tailwinds from digital add-ons in fiscal 2026, revenue growth is in line with the prior year. Beginning fiscal year 2027, we will only guide to total revenue.

Speaker #3: Given that subscription revenue has now become the vast majority of our recognized revenue base . Specifically , 98% of our revenue in fiscal 2026 , we will continue to report the breakdown between subscription and professional services and other revenue in the footnotes of our SEC filings .

Blake Grayson: We will continue to report the breakdown between subscription, professional services, and other revenue in the footnotes of our SEC filings based on materiality thresholds. For profitability, we expect non-GAAP gross margin to be between 80.8% to 81.2% for Q1 and between 81.5% and 82.0% for fiscal 2027. We expect non-GAAP operating margin to reach 29.0% to 29.5% for Q1 and 30.0% to 30.5% for fiscal 2027. Our fiscal 2027 operating margins guidance reflects a similar level of margin expansion as we saw in fiscal 2026.

Blake Grayson: We will continue to report the breakdown between subscription, professional services, and other revenue in the footnotes of our SEC filings based on materiality thresholds. For profitability, we expect non-GAAP gross margin to be between 80.8% to 81.2% for Q1 and between 81.5% and 82.0% for fiscal 2027. We expect non-GAAP operating margin to reach 29.0% to 29.5% for Q1 and 30.0% to 30.5% for fiscal 2027. Our fiscal 2027 operating margins guidance reflects a similar level of margin expansion as we saw in fiscal 2026.

Speaker #3: Based on materiality and thresholds for profitability, we expect non-GAAP gross margin to be between 80.8% and 81.2% for Q1, and between 81.5% and 82.0% for fiscal 2027.

Speaker #3: We expect non-GAAP operating margin to reach 29.0% to 29.5% for Q1, and 30.0% to 30.5% for fiscal 2027. Our fiscal 2027 operating margin guidance reflects a similar level of margin expansion as we saw in fiscal 2026.

Speaker #3: We expect non-GAAP fully diluted weighted average shares outstanding of 196 million to 201 million for Q1, and 190 million to 195 million for fiscal 2027.

Blake Grayson: We expect non-GAAP fully diluted weighted average shares outstanding of 196 million to 201 million for Q1 and 190 million to 195 million for fiscal 2027, a meaningful reduction from the prior year, as we expect that our buyback activity will more than offset dilution. For detailed commentary on top and bottom line factors to guidance, please see the modeling considerations appendix in our prepared remarks. In closing, fiscal 2026 was defined by the successful global rollout of IAM and our continued commitment to business fundamentals and improving efficiencies while redeploying excess capital to shareholders. As we look toward fiscal 2027, we remain focused on leveraging efficiency gains to drive product innovation and ultimately accelerating ARR growth, delivering the long-term improvements that our customers, shareholders, and employees will be proud of.

Blake Grayson: We expect non-GAAP fully diluted weighted average shares outstanding of 196 million to 201 million for Q1 and 190 million to 195 million for fiscal 2027, a meaningful reduction from the prior year, as we expect that our buyback activity will more than offset dilution. For detailed commentary on top and bottom line factors to guidance, please see the modeling considerations appendix in our prepared remarks. In closing, fiscal 2026 was defined by the successful global rollout of IAM and our continued commitment to business fundamentals and improving efficiencies while redeploying excess capital to shareholders. As we look toward fiscal 2027, we remain focused on leveraging efficiency gains to drive product innovation and ultimately accelerating ARR growth, delivering the long-term improvements that our customers, shareholders, and employees will be proud of.

Speaker #3: A meaningful reduction from the prior year. As we expect that our buyback activity will more than offset dilution, for detailed commentary on top and bottom line factors to guidance, please see the Modeling Considerations appendix in our prepared remarks.

Speaker #3: In closing, fiscal 2026 was defined by the successful global rollout of IAM and our continued commitment to business fundamentals and improving efficiencies.

Speaker #3: While redeploying excess capital to shareholders . As we look toward fiscal 2027 , we remain focused on leveraging efficiency gains to drive product innovation and ultimately accelerating IRR growth , delivering the long term improvements that our customers , shareholders , and employees will be proud of .

Speaker #3: That concludes our prepared remarks. With that, operator, let's open the call for questions.

Blake Grayson: That concludes our prepared remarks. With that, operator, let's open the call for questions.

Blake Grayson: That concludes our prepared remarks. With that, operator, let's open the call for questions.

Speaker #4: Thank you. If you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question.

Operator: Thank you. If you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star two if you would like to remove your question from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star keys. Our first question is from Rob Owens with Piper Sandler. Please proceed. Rob, please check and see if your line is muted.

Operator: Thank you. If you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star two if you would like to remove your question from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star keys. Our first question is from Rob Owens with Piper Sandler. Please proceed. Rob, please check and see if your line is muted.

Speaker #4: You may press star two if you would like to remove your question from the queue. And for participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star keys.

Speaker #4: Our first question is from Rob Owens with Piper Sandler. Please proceed, Rob. Please check and see if your line is muted.

Speaker #5: Sorry about that. Thank you, guys, for taking my question and for your patience while I figured out the mute button there, Elon. In your prepared remarks, you talked about being positioned to accelerate the business.

Rob Owens: Sorry about that. Thank you guys for taking my question, your patience while I figured out the mute button there. Allan, in your prepared remarks, you talked about being positioned to accelerate the business, and clearly that's reflected here in the ARR guide. After two years of consistent growth, now calling for modest acceleration. Maybe help us unpack what's underpinning that confidence. You talked about gross retention, net retention, but can you stack rank kind of the delta between the two with IAM playing a role? Maybe speak to some of the top-of-funnel activity that you're seeing as well. Lastly, along those lines, the level of conservatism that you have in this guidance relative to prior years. Thanks.

Rob Owens: Sorry about that. Thank you guys for taking my question, your patience while I figured out the mute button there. Allan, in your prepared remarks, you talked about being positioned to accelerate the business, and clearly that's reflected here in the ARR guide. After two years of consistent growth, now calling for modest acceleration. Maybe help us unpack what's underpinning that confidence. You talked about gross retention, net retention, but can you stack rank kind of the delta between the two with IAM playing a role? Maybe speak to some of the top-of-funnel activity that you're seeing as well. Lastly, along those lines, the level of conservatism that you have in this guidance relative to prior years. Thanks.

Speaker #5: And clearly, that's reflected here in the IRR guide. And after two years of consistent growth, now calling for modest acceleration. So maybe help us unpack what's underpinning that confidence.

Speaker #5: And you talked about gross retention , net retention . But can you stack rank kind of the delta between the two with IAM playing a role , maybe speak to some of the top of funnel activity that you're seeing as well .

Speaker #5: And lastly , on that line along those lines , the level of conservatism that you have in this guidance relative to prior years , thanks Sure .

Allan Thygesen: Sure. Thanks for the question. Overall, I think we are, we're really pleased with the momentum in the business, and that's what's reflected in our guide. We continue to see, I think, very strong adoption and product market fit in the commercial segment and accelerating momentum in enterprise, which represents an even larger addressable opportunity. In terms of the drivers of the growth this year, it's a combination of new expansion bookings and retention. Both are very significant focus areas inside the company. On the expansion side, as I said, it cuts across segments primarily driven by IAM.

Allan Thygesen: Sure. Thanks for the question. Overall, I think we are, we're really pleased with the momentum in the business, and that's what's reflected in our guide. We continue to see, I think, very strong adoption and product market fit in the commercial segment and accelerating momentum in enterprise, which represents an even larger addressable opportunity. In terms of the drivers of the growth this year, it's a combination of new expansion bookings and retention. Both are very significant focus areas inside the company. On the expansion side, as I said, it cuts across segments primarily driven by IAM.

Speaker #2: Thanks for the question . Overall , I think we are we're really pleased with the momentum in the business . And that's what's reflected in our guide .

Speaker #2: We continue to see , I think , very strong adoption in product market fit in the commercial segment and accelerating momentum in enterprise , which represents an even larger addressable opportunity in terms of the drivers of the the growth this year .

Speaker #2: It's a combination of , of new , new expansion bookings and retention . And both are very significant focus areas inside the company on the expansion side , as I said , it cuts across segments primarily driven by IAM and on the retention side , of course , the bulk of the business in E-sign , and I think we're doing better and better job on retention there reflected in the increasing DNR rates .

Allan Thygesen: On the retention side, of course, the bulk of the business is in eSign, and I think we're doing a better and better job on retention there, reflected in the increasing DNR rates. We're starting to see a modest contribution from IAM as well, which has even higher retention, but it's still a very small part of the book. That's not a huge driver in this year. Of course, will become more important as we go further out. Blake, I don't know if there's anything you want to add to that.

Allan Thygesen: On the retention side, of course, the bulk of the business is in eSign, and I think we're doing a better and better job on retention there, reflected in the increasing DNR rates. We're starting to see a modest contribution from IAM as well, which has even higher retention, but it's still a very small part of the book. That's not a huge driver in this year. Of course, will become more important as we go further out. Blake, I don't know if there's anything you want to add to that.

Speaker #2: We're starting to see a modest contribution from IAM as well, which has higher retention, but it's still a very small part of the book.

Speaker #2: So that's not a huge driver . In this year . Of course , we'll will become more important as we as we go further out .

Speaker #2: Blake, do you want to add to that? No. Yeah. Just...

Blake Grayson: No, yeah, just to the kinda ending question on the level of conservatism, I think, Rob, that was in your question. You know, we continue to forecast and communicate what we see in the business. No change in our philosophy there. You know, as things develop over time, we'll continue to update, but no change in structure or anything like that.

Blake Grayson: No, yeah, just to the kinda ending question on the level of conservatism, I think, Rob, that was in your question. You know, we continue to forecast and communicate what we see in the business. No change in our philosophy there. You know, as things develop over time, we'll continue to update, but no change in structure or anything like that.

Speaker #3: Kind of ending question on the the level of conservatism . I think , Rob , those in your question , you know , we forecast we continue to forecast and communicate what we see in the business .

Speaker #3: No change in our philosophy there . And , you know , as things develop over time , we'll continue to update . But no change in structure or anything like that .

Speaker #5: Great. Thanks for the color.

Rob Owens: Great. Thanks for the color.

Rob Owens: Great. Thanks for the color.

Speaker #4: Our next question is from Tyler Radke with Citi. Please proceed.

Operator: Our next question is from Tyler Radke with Citi. Please proceed.

Operator: Our next question is from Tyler Radke with Citi. Please proceed.

Speaker #6: Yeah . Thank you for taking the question . I appreciate all the disclosure and , you know , prepared remarks you put out ahead of time .

Tyler Radke: Yeah. Thank you for taking the question, and appreciate all the disclosure and you know, prepared remarks you put out ahead of time, and good to see the slight exceed on the guide. I guess Blake, you walked through sort of the guidance philosophy on ARR, which we understand is fundamentally a different metric than billings. I guess as we just sort of look at the IAM piece implied within your guidance, I mean, very strong growth this year. I think you added you know, about $285 million of net new IAM in FY 2026, which was you know, up orders of magnitude from the prior year.

Tyler Radke: Yeah. Thank you for taking the question, and appreciate all the disclosure and you know, prepared remarks you put out ahead of time, and good to see the slight exceed on the guide. I guess Blake, you walked through sort of the guidance philosophy on ARR, which we understand is fundamentally a different metric than billings. I guess as we just sort of look at the IAM piece implied within your guidance, I mean, very strong growth this year. I think you added you know, about $285 million of net new IAM in FY 2026, which was you know, up orders of magnitude from the prior year.

Speaker #6: And good to see the slide excel on the guide . I guess , Blake , you walked through sort of the guidance philosophy on IRR , which we understand is fundamentally a different metric than billings .

Speaker #6: But I guess is we just sort of look at the Im piece implied within your guidance . I mean , very strong growth this year .

Speaker #6: I think you added , you know , about 280 , 285 million of net new IAM in FY 24 , which was , you know , up orders of magnitude or sorry , an FY 26 up orders of magnitude from the prior year .

Speaker #6: But if we look at your guide for next year for FY27, it sort of implies like a similar amount of net new in IM.

Tyler Radke: If we look at your guide, for next year, for FY 2027, it sort of implies like a similar amount of net new in IAM. Can you just help us understand? I mean, it seems like this is a business that's growing exponentially. You know, you got a lot of new initiatives ahead. You talked about consumption pricing, the C-suite selling. Like, why wouldn't that number continue to ramp? And maybe just sorta help frame that in the context of returning to double-digit growth. Kinda, what else do you kinda need to see to kick in to get back there? Thank you.

Tyler Radke: If we look at your guide, for next year, for FY 2027, it sort of implies like a similar amount of net new in IAM. Can you just help us understand? I mean, it seems like this is a business that's growing exponentially. You know, you got a lot of new initiatives ahead. You talked about consumption pricing, the C-suite selling. Like, why wouldn't that number continue to ramp? And maybe just sorta help frame that in the context of returning to double-digit growth. Kinda, what else do you kinda need to see to kick in to get back there? Thank you.

Speaker #6: So can you just help us understand ? I mean , it seems like this is a business that's growing exponentially . You know , you got a lot of new new initiatives ahead .

Speaker #6: You talked about consumption , pricing , the C-suite , selling . So like , why wouldn't that number continue to ramp and maybe just sort of help frame frame that in the context of returning to double digit growth , kind of what are , what , what else do you kind of need to see to kick in to get back there ?

Speaker #6: Thank you .

Speaker #3: Sure. And thanks for the question. You know what? We saw this year, and what we're expecting to see next year again, is a pretty linear progression in the IAM share of IRR.

Allan Thygesen: Sure. You know, thanks for the question. You know, what we saw this year and what we're expecting to see next year, again, it's a pretty linear progression in the IAM share of ARR. You saw us go from 2.3% to 10.8% this year. We're forecasting approximately 18% by the end of next year. A lot of that has to do with renewal cycles, right? How are we having those discussions with our customers, getting deeper into their business in a consultative approach around what's right for them. I would just say IAM's tracking as we hoped it would. I'm excited for it to become an even larger percentage of our business over time. It absolutely is a key growth lever for us to get to that aspirational double-digit growth rate.

Allan Thygesen: Sure. You know, thanks for the question. You know, what we saw this year and what we're expecting to see next year, again, it's a pretty linear progression in the IAM share of ARR. You saw us go from 2.3% to 10.8% this year. We're forecasting approximately 18% by the end of next year. A lot of that has to do with renewal cycles, right? How are we having those discussions with our customers, getting deeper into their business in a consultative approach around what's right for them. I would just say IAM's tracking as we hoped it would. I'm excited for it to become an even larger percentage of our business over time. It absolutely is a key growth lever for us to get to that aspirational double-digit growth rate.

Speaker #3: You saw us go from 2.3% to 10.8% this year. We're forecasting approximately 18% by the end of next year. A lot of that has to do with renewal cycles, right?

Speaker #3: So, how are we having those discussions with our customers—getting deeper into their business in a consultative approach, or what's right for them?

Speaker #3: I would just say it's tracking as we hoped it would. I'm excited for it to become an even larger percentage of our business over time.

Speaker #3: It absolutely is a key growth lever for us to get to that aspirational double digit growth rate . You know , that combined with improvements in gross retention , which not only are we making those in e-sign , but also we are seeing IAM contribute to that .

Allan Thygesen: You know, that combined with improvements in gross retention, which not only are we making those in eSignature, but also we are seeing IAM contribute to that in, you know, small shares today, just 'cause we're getting our very first renewal cohorts through. The combination of those two things, I think, helps us reach that longer-term, aspirational goal of reaching double-digit growth. Hopefully that helps.

Allan Thygesen: You know, that combined with improvements in gross retention, which not only are we making those in eSignature, but also we are seeing IAM contribute to that in, you know, small shares today, just 'cause we're getting our very first renewal cohorts through. The combination of those two things, I think, helps us reach that longer-term, aspirational goal of reaching double-digit growth. Hopefully that helps.

Speaker #3: And , you know , small shares today , just because we're getting our very first renewal cohorts through . But the combination of those two things , I think helps us reach that longer term , aspirational goal of reaching double digit growth .

Speaker #3: So hopefully that helps

Speaker #6: Great . Thank you

Tyler Radke: Great. Thank you.

Tyler Radke: Great. Thank you.

Speaker #4: Our next question is from Mark Murphy with J.P. Morgan. Please proceed.

Operator: Our next question is from Mark Murphy with J.P. Morgan. Please proceed.

Operator: Our next question is from Mark Murphy with J.P. Morgan. Please proceed.

Speaker #7: Thank you. I'll add my congrats, Allan. It's intriguing to see that 200 million documents have been ingested into a navigator.

Mark Murphy: Thank you. I'll add my congrats, Alan. It's intriguing to see the 200 million documents have been ingested into Navigator. Because I think theoretically, it would give you an accuracy advantage or performance advantage if you compare it to LLMs that might be, you know, out there running queries on their own. You're also saying that the Anthropic partnership is central to your strategy. Can you comment on how much of a, you know, priority you want your own sovereign AI system, Iris, to be, you know, versus kinda working with Anthropic? Basically, how much of an accuracy advantage are you seeing when people are using Iris?

Mark Murphy: Thank you. I'll add my congrats, Alan. It's intriguing to see the 200 million documents have been ingested into Navigator. Because I think theoretically, it would give you an accuracy advantage or performance advantage if you compare it to LLMs that might be, you know, out there running queries on their own. You're also saying that the Anthropic partnership is central to your strategy. Can you comment on how much of a, you know, priority you want your own sovereign AI system, Iris, to be, you know, versus kinda working with Anthropic? Basically, how much of an accuracy advantage are you seeing when people are using Iris?

Speaker #7: I think, theoretically, it would give you an accuracy advantage or performance advantage if you compare it to LMS. That might be, you know, out there running queries on their own.

Speaker #7: You're also saying that the Anthropic partnership is central to your strategy. Can you comment on how much of a priority you want your own sovereign AI system?

Speaker #7: Iris, to be, you know, versus kind of working with Anthropic, and basically, how much of an accuracy advantage are you seeing when people are using Iris.

Speaker #8: Yeah , sorry .

Allan Thygesen: Yeah. Let me start with this at the highest level. AI has been fantastic for DocuSign over the last three years. I think we saw the potential impact on the agreement space early, articulated the IAM ambition, and you can see how that's powered some incremental growth for us. I wanna distinguish between the agreement library and the processing that we do on that, and then what's the UI that people interact with. On the data side, we have a huge advantage in using private consented agreements, not just public data. When we started with IAM, we were processing off public data, and now, as you mentioned, we've reached 200 million agreements that have been consented to be processed. And that's powering increased accuracy in our models.

Allan Thygesen: Yeah. Let me start with this at the highest level. AI has been fantastic for DocuSign over the last three years. I think we saw the potential impact on the agreement space early, articulated the IAM ambition, and you can see how that's powered some incremental growth for us. I wanna distinguish between the agreement library and the processing that we do on that, and then what's the UI that people interact with. On the data side, we have a huge advantage in using private consented agreements, not just public data. When we started with IAM, we were processing off public data, and now, as you mentioned, we've reached 200 million agreements that have been consented to be processed. And that's powering increased accuracy in our models.

Speaker #2: Just at the highest level, AI has been fantastic for DocuSign over the last three years. I think we saw the potential impact on the agreement space early, particularly the AI vision.

Speaker #2: And you can see how that's powered some incredible growth for us. I want to distinguish between the agreement library and the processing that we do on that.

Speaker #2: And then, what's the UI that people interact with on the data side? We have a huge advantage in using private, consented agreements, not just public data.

Speaker #2: When we started with I'm, we were processing off public data, and now, as you mentioned, we've reached 200 million agreements that have been consented to be processed.

Speaker #2: And that's powering increased accuracy in our models. At the same time, because we're processing large amounts of data, we've taken significant steps to drive additional efficiency in how we process that data.

Allan Thygesen: At the same time, because we're processing large amounts of data, we've taken significant steps to drive additional efficiency in how we process that data, and that's what's driving the very significant cost advantage that we have in processing these large data sets. I think we're certainly benefiting from the overall model innovation that the Anthropic, OpenAI, and Google of the world are doing and building on top of that, leveraging the incredible CapEx innovation they're doing. We have our own proprietary access to data workflows, and trust from customers that adds to that. In terms of the user experience, we've always had the philosophy that we wanna reach users, enable them wherever they wanna do their work.

Allan Thygesen: At the same time, because we're processing large amounts of data, we've taken significant steps to drive additional efficiency in how we process that data, and that's what's driving the very significant cost advantage that we have in processing these large data sets. I think we're certainly benefiting from the overall model innovation that the Anthropic, OpenAI, and Google of the world are doing and building on top of that, leveraging the incredible CapEx innovation they're doing. We have our own proprietary access to data workflows, and trust from customers that adds to that. In terms of the user experience, we've always had the philosophy that we wanna reach users, enable them wherever they wanna do their work.

Speaker #2: And that's what's driving the very significant cost advantage that we have in processing these large data sets . So I think it's a we're certainly benefiting from the overall model innovation that the anthropic and OpenAI's and Google's of the world are doing and building on top of that , leveraging the incredible CapEx innovation they're doing .

Speaker #2: But then we have our own proprietary access to data workflows and , and trust from customers . That adds to that in terms of the user experience , we've always had the philosophy that we want to reach users and enable them wherever they want to do their work .

Speaker #2: So they can certainly do that through the DocuSign UI. But we've always been available in Salesforce, in the SAPs of the world, Workday, and in many other applications.

Allan Thygesen: They can certainly do that through the DocuSign UI, but we've always been available in Salesforce, in the SAPs of the world, in Workday, and in many other applications. It's sort of a logical extension of that to now be available in the leading chatbots like Anthropic or OpenAI, which we announced last fall. I view that as a continuation of our strategy. You should expect to see us if new surfaces arise that are important to our customers. We wanna make DocuSign data and actions available in those surfaces. Hopefully that's clear.

Allan Thygesen: They can certainly do that through the DocuSign UI, but we've always been available in Salesforce, in the SAPs of the world, in Workday, and in many other applications. It's sort of a logical extension of that to now be available in the leading chatbots like Anthropic or OpenAI, which we announced last fall. I view that as a continuation of our strategy. You should expect to see us if new surfaces arise that are important to our customers. We wanna make DocuSign data and actions available in those surfaces. Hopefully that's clear.

Speaker #2: And so it's sort of a logical extension of that to now be available in, in the, in the leading chatbots like Anthropic's or OpenAI's, which we announced last fall.

Speaker #2: And so I don't view that as a continuation of our strategy. And you should expect to see us, if new surfaces arise that are important to our customers.

Speaker #2: We want to make DocuSign data and actions available in those surfaces. Hopefully that's clear.

Speaker #7: Makes sense. Thank you very much.

Mark Murphy: Makes sense. Thank you very much.

Mark Murphy: Makes sense. Thank you very much.

Speaker #4: Our next question is from Patrick Walravens with Citizens JMP. Please proceed.

Operator: Our next question is from Patrick Walravens with Citizens JMP. Please proceed.

Operator: Our next question is from Patrick Walravens with Citizens JMP. Please proceed.

Speaker #9: Oh , great . Thank you . And let me add my congratulations . If I could ask one for each of you . Allen .

Patrick Walravens: Oh, great. Thank you. Let me add my congratulations. If I could ask one for each of you. Allan, I was intrigued by the comment about the bank, I think it was maybe the Bank of Queensland that bought DocuSign through the Microsoft Azure marketplace. If you could just comment on the Microsoft relationship and how that's trending, that would be great. Then, Blake, for you, I've gotten emails about this. If you wouldn't mind touching on where you are on your philosophy on stock-based comp, I think that would be appreciated by your investors.

Patrick Walravens: Oh, great. Thank you. Let me add my congratulations. If I could ask one for each of you. Allan, I was intrigued by the comment about the bank, I think it was maybe the Bank of Queensland that bought DocuSign through the Microsoft Azure marketplace. If you could just comment on the Microsoft relationship and how that's trending, that would be great. Then, Blake, for you, I've gotten emails about this. If you wouldn't mind touching on where you are on your philosophy on stock-based comp, I think that would be appreciated by your investors.

Speaker #9: I was intrigued by the comment about the bank. I think it was maybe the Bank of Queensland that bought DocuSign through the Microsoft Azure Marketplace.

Speaker #9: So if you could just comment on the the Microsoft relationship and how that's trending , that would be great . And then Blake , for you , I've gotten emails about this .

Speaker #9: So if you wouldn't mind touching on where you are on your philosophy on stock-based comp, I think that would be appreciated by your investors.

Speaker #2: Yeah . So on the Bank of Queensland deal , yes , we that was transacted through the Microsoft Azure marketplace . And we've done a number of enterprise transactions there .

Allan Thygesen: Yeah. On the Bank of Queensland deal, yes, that was transacted through the Microsoft Azure Marketplace, and we've done a number of enterprise transactions there. As you all know, Microsoft has a number of, you know, Azure commitment agreements with large companies, and often they appreciate being able to buy through that platform. It's beyond just the convenience factor. I would just say I've been thrilled with Microsoft as a partner. They really leaned in here and were a big part of the sale. In fact, a Microsoft leader presented that case at our conference last week, to the entire partner community. They've been fantastic, and we look forward to doing even more with them. Blake, I think there was a second question for you.

Allan Thygesen: Yeah. On the Bank of Queensland deal, yes, that was transacted through the Microsoft Azure Marketplace, and we've done a number of enterprise transactions there. As you all know, Microsoft has a number of, you know, Azure commitment agreements with large companies, and often they appreciate being able to buy through that platform. It's beyond just the convenience factor. I would just say I've been thrilled with Microsoft as a partner. They really leaned in here and were a big part of the sale. In fact, a Microsoft leader presented that case at our conference last week, to the entire partner community. They've been fantastic, and we look forward to doing even more with them. Blake, I think there was a second question for you.

Speaker #2: As you all know , Microsoft has a number of of , you know , Azure commitment agreements with large companies and often they appreciate being able to buy through that platform .

Speaker #2: But it's beyond just the convenience factor. I would just say I've been thrilled with Microsoft's partner. They really leaned in here and were a big part of the sale.

Speaker #2: In fact, a Microsoft leader presented that case at our conference last week to the entire partner community. So they've been fantastic, and we look forward to doing even more with them.

Speaker #2: I think the second question for you .

Speaker #3: Yeah , thanks , Patrick . So related to stock based comp , we've made a concerted effort , you know , around that line item , I think you'll see in the financials that stock based comp grew .

Blake Grayson: Yeah. Thanks, Patrick. Related to stock-based comp, we made a concerted effort, you know, around that line item. I think you'll see in the financials that stock-based comp grew. I mean, it's been pretty flat actually for the past couple of years. Stock-based comp grew 2% year over year in fiscal 2026. I think that was coming off a slight decrease, -1% in fiscal 2025. You can see that in our results, if you just take SBC as a percentage of revenue, it's been declining the past couple of years. You know, we're happy with that. I expect it to decline again into fiscal 2027.

Blake Grayson: Yeah. Thanks, Patrick. Related to stock-based comp, we made a concerted effort, you know, around that line item. I think you'll see in the financials that stock-based comp grew. I mean, it's been pretty flat actually for the past couple of years. Stock-based comp grew 2% year over year in fiscal 2026. I think that was coming off a slight decrease, -1% in fiscal 2025. You can see that in our results, if you just take SBC as a percentage of revenue, it's been declining the past couple of years. You know, we're happy with that. I expect it to decline again into fiscal 2027.

Speaker #3: I mean, it's been pretty flat, actually, for the past couple of years. Stock-based comp grew 2% year over year in fiscal '26.

Speaker #3: I think that was coming off a slight decrease—negative 1% in fiscal '25. And you can see that in our results.

Speaker #3: If you just take SBC as a percentage of revenue , it's been declining the past couple of years . And so , you know , we're happy with that .

Speaker #3: I expect it to decline again in fiscal 27 . You know , as you all know , there's been a number of actions that we've taken over the past years to to manage that based comp around whether that's headquartered head headcount , resource management , whether it's around fewer executive grants and also shift to more RSUs , whether that's making adjustments to equity structures around leading a bit more into cash comp .

Blake Grayson: You know, as you all know, there's been a number of actions that we've taken over the past, you know, years to manage stock-based comp around, whether that's headcount resource management, whether it's around fewer executive grants and also shift to more RSUs, whether that's making adjustments to equity structures around leaning a bit more into cash comp. We recognize we still have work to do, but I'm proud of the continued progress that we're making, and we're focused on continuing that.

Blake Grayson: You know, as you all know, there's been a number of actions that we've taken over the past, you know, years to manage stock-based comp around, whether that's headcount resource management, whether it's around fewer executive grants and also shift to more RSUs, whether that's making adjustments to equity structures around leaning a bit more into cash comp. We recognize we still have work to do, but I'm proud of the continued progress that we're making, and we're focused on continuing that.

Speaker #3: We recognize we still have work to do, but I'm proud of the continued progress we're making, and we're focused on continuing that.

Speaker #6: Maybe .

Speaker #9: Great .

Patrick Walravens: Great. Thank you both.

Patrick Walravens: Great. Thank you both.

Speaker #6: Thank you .

Speaker #2: Both for .

Speaker #8: That .

Allan Thygesen: Maybe just to add to that. Yeah. Just to add to your question, you asked about Microsoft, but I just want to. Since you mentioned Bank of Queensland, I think it's an important use case to talk about. I think you all know that financial services has always been an important vertical for DocuSign. Of course, we powered many use cases from bank account onboarding to mortgages to loan agreements, et cetera. Historically, we sat just at the end of the process, the execution moment. Very important moment, very high value moment. That has powered. Let's see. We basically work with practically every bank, certainly all the large ones.

Allan Thygesen: Maybe just to add to that. Yeah. Just to add to your question, you asked about Microsoft, but I just want to. Since you mentioned Bank of Queensland, I think it's an important use case to talk about. I think you all know that financial services has always been an important vertical for DocuSign. Of course, we powered many use cases from bank account onboarding to mortgages to loan agreements, et cetera. Historically, we sat just at the end of the process, the execution moment. Very important moment, very high value moment. That has powered. Let's see. We basically work with practically every bank, certainly all the large ones.

Speaker #2: Yeah. So just to add to your question, you asked about Microsoft, but I didn't want to since you mentioned Bank of Queensland.

Speaker #2: I think it's an important use case to talk about. So, I think you all know that financial services has always been an important vertical for DocuSign.

Speaker #2: And of course , we powered use cases from bank account onboarding to mortgages to loan agreements , but historically , we sat just at the end of the process , the execution model , very important moment , very high value moment .

Speaker #2: And but that has powered we basically work with every bank , certainly all the large ones . But now we can essentially power the entire onboarding process from the initial presentation of the sign up process to real time data validation of the data that the customer enters to real time identity verification of their documents , and that they are present .

Allan Thygesen: Now we can essentially power the entire onboarding process from the initial presentation of the sign-up process to real-time data validation of the data the customer enters, to real-time identity verification of their documents and that they are present, and then of course, the execution moment, and then writing the data back to whatever systems power the next step in the process, which is dramatic simplification, and both improvement in the customer experience and improvement in internal efficiency. Bank of Queensland is an example of one of the early customers for that end-to-end process. I think we're gonna do a lot more of that over the next couple of years.

Allan Thygesen: Now we can essentially power the entire onboarding process from the initial presentation of the sign-up process to real-time data validation of the data the customer enters, to real-time identity verification of their documents and that they are present, and then of course, the execution moment, and then writing the data back to whatever systems power the next step in the process, which is dramatic simplification, and both improvement in the customer experience and improvement in internal efficiency. Bank of Queensland is an example of one of the early customers for that end-to-end process. I think we're gonna do a lot more of that over the next couple of years.

Speaker #2: And then , of course , the execution moment and then writing the data back to whatever , whatever systems power , the next step in the process , which is dramatic simplification and both improvement in customer experience and improvement in internal efficiency and Bank of Queensland , as an example of one of the early customers for that end to end process .

Speaker #2: And I think we're going to do a lot more of that over the next couple of years. So I just thought that was an exciting use case.

Allan Thygesen: I just thought that was an exciting use case, not just for what it illustrates about the Microsoft partnership, but for what it illustrates for a use case that might not be well understood.

Allan Thygesen: I just thought that was an exciting use case, not just for what it illustrates about the Microsoft partnership, but for what it illustrates for a use case that might not be well understood.

Speaker #2: Not just for what it illustrates about the Microsoft partnership before. It illustrates a use case that might not be well understood.

Speaker #9: Thank you

Patrick Walravens: Thank you.

Patrick Walravens: Thank you.

Speaker #4: Our next question is from Kurt Materne with Evercore ISI. Please proceed.

Operator: Our next question is from Kirk Materne with Evercore ISI. Please proceed.

Operator: Our next question is from Kirk Materne with Evercore ISI. Please proceed.

Speaker #10: Hi . Thanks for taking the question . I was wondering you could you just mentioned banks and I was wondering if you could just talk a little bit about what you guys are thinking about from a vertical perspective .

Kirk Materne: Hi. Thanks for taking the question. I was wondering, you just mentioned banks, and I was wondering, Allan, if you could just talk a little bit about what you guys are thinking about from a vertical perspective. I realize you're a horizontal platform, at its core, but I was just kinda curious what you're seeing in terms of either, you know, faster adoption in some verticals for IAM and maybe what you're doing to lean into some verticals where there's a really good, you know, product fit, for that product. Thanks.

Kirk Materne: Hi. Thanks for taking the question. I was wondering, you just mentioned banks, and I was wondering, Allan, if you could just talk a little bit about what you guys are thinking about from a vertical perspective. I realize you're a horizontal platform, at its core, but I was just kinda curious what you're seeing in terms of either, you know, faster adoption in some verticals for IAM and maybe what you're doing to lean into some verticals where there's a really good, you know, product fit, for that product. Thanks.

Speaker #10: I realize you're a horizontal platform at its core, but I was just kind of curious what you're seeing in terms of either faster adoption in some verticals for IM, and maybe what you're doing to lean into some verticals where there's a really good product fit for that product.

Speaker #10: Thanks .

Speaker #2: Yeah . Thanks for the question . You know , at the highest level , I would say we're still an incredibly broad application .

Allan Thygesen: Yeah. Thanks for the question. Yeah. At the high level, I would say we're still an incredibly broad application. That's true for sign, that's also true for IM. We see it adopted across industries, across companies of different sizes, and now across geographies. I would say that we are moving increasingly towards some functional use cases. You know, the account sign-up example I just gave for banks, of course, is a customer experience, you know, front of the house type application. We also do that in B to B. For B to B sales organizations, that's, of course, been a long-standing partnership with Salesforce, and we do that for other CRMs as well.

Allan Thygesen: Yeah. Thanks for the question. Yeah. At the high level, I would say we're still an incredibly broad application. That's true for sign, that's also true for IM. We see it adopted across industries, across companies of different sizes, and now across geographies. I would say that we are moving increasingly towards some functional use cases. You know, the account sign-up example I just gave for banks, of course, is a customer experience, you know, front of the house type application. We also do that in B to B. For B to B sales organizations, that's, of course, been a long-standing partnership with Salesforce, and we do that for other CRMs as well.

Speaker #2: And that's true for sign . It's also true for if you see it adopted across the across companies of different sizes and now across geographies , I would say that we are moving increasingly towards functional use cases .

Speaker #2: So the account sign up . I just gave for banks , of course , is a customer experience front of the house type application .

Speaker #2: We also do that in B2B for sales organizations. That's, of course, been a long-standing partnership with Salesforce. And we do that for other CRMs as well.

Speaker #2: And now increasingly more use cases in procurement where there's a lot of B2B contracting that happens . And in HR , where the , you know , attraction and recruiting and onboarding of new employees , you know , it mirrors in many ways the bank account example that I gave you at the beginning .

Allan Thygesen: Now increasingly, more use cases in procurement, where there's a lot of B to B contracting that happens, and in HR, where you know, attraction and recruiting and onboarding of new employees, you know, mirrors in many ways, the bank account example that I gave you at the beginning. We are focused on those functional use cases, if you will, more than in specific industries. To the extent that we focus on industries, financial services, healthcare, and government are three areas that we invest a little extra in, because well, they're complicated, they're high value, and we do well in them. It's very broad from an industry perspective.

Allan Thygesen: Now increasingly, more use cases in procurement, where there's a lot of B to B contracting that happens, and in HR, where you know, attraction and recruiting and onboarding of new employees, you know, mirrors in many ways, the bank account example that I gave you at the beginning. We are focused on those functional use cases, if you will, more than in specific industries. To the extent that we focus on industries, financial services, healthcare, and government are three areas that we invest a little extra in, because well, they're complicated, they're high value, and we do well in them. It's very broad from an industry perspective.

Speaker #2: So we are focused on those functional use cases , if you will , more than specific industries . To the extent that we focus on industries , financial services , healthcare , and government are three areas that we , we invest a little extra in because , well , they're complicated .

Speaker #2: They're high value . And , and we do well in them . But but it's , it's very broad from an industry perspective

Kirk Materne: Okay, that's super helpful. If I could just ask a follow-up for Blake. Just Blake, on gross retention, do you have any sense on how that changes with, you know, IAM customers for you all? I realize the cohorts are pretty new here, but I was just kind of curious if that's playing out the way you would have expected in terms of potentially higher gross retention for those customers. Thanks.

Kirk Materne: Okay, that's super helpful. If I could just ask a follow-up for Blake. Just Blake, on gross retention, do you have any sense on how that changes with, you know, IAM customers for you all? I realize the cohorts are pretty new here, but I was just kind of curious if that's playing out the way you would have expected in terms of potentially higher gross retention for those customers. Thanks.

Speaker #10: , that's super helpful . If I could just ask a follow up for Blake , just Blake on gross retention . Do you have any sense of how that changes with Im customers for you all , I realize the cohorts are pretty new here , but I was just kind of curious if that's playing out the way you would have expected in terms of potentially higher gross retention for those those customers .

Speaker #10: Thanks .

Speaker #3: Yeah , we are seeing and I'm going to preface this by saying it's a very early days of our first renewal core . So the sample size is pretty small , but even with that said , gross retention and dollar net retention rates for these Im early renewal courts are better than the company average .

Blake Grayson: Yeah. We are seeing, and I'm gonna preface this by saying it's the very early days of our first renewal cohort, so the sample size is pretty small. Even with that said, gross retention and dollar net retention rates for these IM early renewal cohorts are better than the company average. I would say cautiously optimistic, excited. It's frankly what we expected from this 'cause just of all the feature functionality that comes with IM, and we'll see how that develops over time. I'm cautiously optimistic about that so far.

Blake Grayson: Yeah. We are seeing, and I'm gonna preface this by saying it's the very early days of our first renewal cohort, so the sample size is pretty small. Even with that said, gross retention and dollar net retention rates for these IM early renewal cohorts are better than the company average. I would say cautiously optimistic, excited. It's frankly what we expected from this 'cause just of all the feature functionality that comes with IM, and we'll see how that develops over time. I'm cautiously optimistic about that so far.

Speaker #3: So I would say cautiously optimistic, excited. It's frankly what we expected from this because of all the features, functionality that comes with it.

Speaker #3: And we'll see how that develops over time. But I'm cautiously optimistic about that so far.

Speaker #8: Thank you

Kirk Materne: Thank you all.

Kirk Materne: Thank you all.

Speaker #4: Our next question is from Allen Verkhovsky at BTIG. Please proceed.

Operator: Our next question is from Allan Verkhovski with BTIG. Please proceed.

Operator: Our next question is from Allan Verkhovski with BTIG. Please proceed.

Speaker #11: Hey, thanks for taking the question here, Allen. It's interesting to see how you've optimized AI processing costs by upwards of 50 times compared to running the direct prompts on LLMs.

Allan Verkhovski: Hey, thanks for taking the question here. Allan, it's interesting to see how you've optimized AI processing costs by upwards of 50 times compared to running the direct prompts on LLMs. Why is IAM consumption-based pricing the right way of monetizing? What were your top learnings from the quarter and conversations with your larger customers about how much of an uplift you can drive with IAM? I've got a quick follow-up with Blake after.

Allan Verkhovski: Hey, thanks for taking the question here. Allan, it's interesting to see how you've optimized AI processing costs by upwards of 50 times compared to running the direct prompts on LLMs. Why is IAM consumption-based pricing the right way of monetizing? What were your top learnings from the quarter and conversations with your larger customers about how much of an uplift you can drive with IAM? I've got a quick follow-up with Blake after.

Speaker #11: Why is IAM consumption-based pricing the right way of monetizing, and what were your top learnings from the quarter and conversations with your larger customers about how much of an uplift you can drive with IAM?

Speaker #11: And then I've got a quick follow-up with Blake after.

Allan Thygesen: Yeah. Just to be clear, the consumption pricing we're referring to is consumption, if you will, of service credits. It's not a straight up token type billing model. You buy a certain amount of capacity. This of course is not new to DocuSign, as you all know, better than almost anyone. Our eSignature business has historically revolved around an envelope model. We pre-buy envelope capacity. You can think of this as sort of a generalization of that. Now with all the different ways we can deliver value with IAM, we've basically looked at how each of those, you know, products and use cases drive value, and created a credit system, and we've now used that with 40, 50 customers. They've been very enthusiastic.

Allan Thygesen: Yeah. Just to be clear, the consumption pricing we're referring to is consumption, if you will, of service credits. It's not a straight up token type billing model. You buy a certain amount of capacity. This of course is not new to DocuSign, as you all know, better than almost anyone. Our eSignature business has historically revolved around an envelope model. We pre-buy envelope capacity. You can think of this as sort of a generalization of that. Now with all the different ways we can deliver value with IAM, we've basically looked at how each of those, you know, products and use cases drive value, and created a credit system, and we've now used that with 40, 50 customers. They've been very enthusiastic.

Speaker #8: Yeah .

Speaker #2: Just to be clear , the consumption pricing we're referring to is consumption , if you will , of service credits . It's not a straight up token type billing model .

Speaker #2: So, you buy a certain amount of capacity. This, of course, is not new to DocuSign, Inc. As you all know, better than almost anyone.

Speaker #2: We have . We are our e-signature business has historically revolved around an envelope model . We pre-buy envelope capacity . You can think of this as sort of a generalization of that .

Speaker #2: Now, with all the different ways we can deliver value with IM, we've basically looked at how each of those products and use cases drive value, and created a credit system.

Speaker #2: And now we've used that with 4,050 customers. They've been very enthusiastic. So both our customers and our sales teams appreciate that model.

Allan Thygesen: Both our customers and our sales teams appreciate that model, and we're now rolling it out next month. I think that'll just power most of our enterprise business going forward. We still think for commercial customers, a simpler pricing model makes sense. For enterprises, where there's so many different ways we can deliver value and grow value over time, that a consumption-based credit model is the right approach. That's been validated in the last six months of trialing.

Allan Thygesen: Both our customers and our sales teams appreciate that model, and we're now rolling it out next month. I think that'll just power most of our enterprise business going forward. We still think for commercial customers, a simpler pricing model makes sense. For enterprises, where there's so many different ways we can deliver value and grow value over time, that a consumption-based credit model is the right approach. That's been validated in the last six months of trialing.

Speaker #2: And so we're now rolling it out next month. And I think that'll just power most of our enterprise business going forward.

Speaker #2: We still think at the for for commercial customers , simpler pricing model makes sense . But for enterprises where there's so many different ways we can deliver value and grow value over time , that a consumption based credit model is the right approach .

Speaker #2: And that's been validated in the last six months of trialing.

Allan Verkhovski: Got it. Blake, is your internal timeline for when you can get to 10% top line growth sooner, unchanged or later after this quarter, and why?

Allan Verkhovski: Got it. Blake, is your internal timeline for when you can get to 10% top line growth sooner, unchanged or later after this quarter, and why?

Speaker #11: Got it . And then Blake , is is your internal timeline for when you can get to 10% top line growth sooner , unchanged or later after this quarter ?

Speaker #11: And why

Blake Grayson: Yeah. You know, just to be frank on this, that is our long-term aspiration for us. It is, for me, in the long term, achievable. If we can both grow expansion and accelerate gross new bookings and improve our retention rates, that's something we could do. The when on that is not as important to me at the moment. We're gonna go as fast as we can as this company to provide value to our customers. I think it's something we can achieve. It's gonna take some time for us, as you can see, but I'm really excited about the opportunity ahead. As far as, like, timeline or anything like that, nothing really to share.

Blake Grayson: Yeah. You know, just to be frank on this, that is our long-term aspiration for us. It is, for me, in the long term, achievable. If we can both grow expansion and accelerate gross new bookings and improve our retention rates, that's something we could do. The when on that is not as important to me at the moment. We're gonna go as fast as we can as this company to provide value to our customers. I think it's something we can achieve. It's gonna take some time for us, as you can see, but I'm really excited about the opportunity ahead. As far as, like, timeline or anything like that, nothing really to share.

Speaker #3: Yeah . You know , we just to be frank on this , that is our long term aspiration for us . It is for me in the long term achievable .

Speaker #3: If we can both grow expansion and accelerate growth, new bookings, and improve our retention rates, that's something we could do. The when on that is not as important to me at the moment.

Speaker #3: We're going to go as fast as we can at this company to provide value—value to our customers. I think it's something we can achieve.

Speaker #3: It's going to take some time for us . As you can see . But I'm really excited about the opportunity ahead . But as far as like timeline or anything like that , nothing really to share .

Allan Verkhovski: Okay, awesome. Thank you, guys.

Allan Verkhovski: Okay, awesome. Thank you, guys.

Speaker #11: Okay, awesome. Thank you, guys.

Operator: Our next question is from Josh Baer with Morgan Stanley. Please proceed.

Operator: Our next question is from Josh Baer with Morgan Stanley. Please proceed.

Speaker #4: Our next question is from Josh Behr with Morgan Stanley. Please proceed.

Josh Baer: Great. Thanks for the question. A couple on the enterprise opportunity. One, Blake, you were mentioning that around, like, the linear progression of IAM as a percentage of ARR. I guess I'm wondering, I know that wasn't like a comment about all years in the future, but I would expect with your positioning and kinda readiness in the enterprise for that to accelerate just because of the size of the enterprise opportunity and now unlocking that. I mean, would that be the case? Like, how are you thinking about the unlock of enterprise and the impact on that linearity?

Josh Baer: Great. Thanks for the question. A couple on the enterprise opportunity. One, Blake, you were mentioning that around, like, the linear progression of IAM as a percentage of ARR. I guess I'm wondering, I know that wasn't like a comment about all years in the future, but I would expect with your positioning and kinda readiness in the enterprise for that to accelerate just because of the size of the enterprise opportunity and now unlocking that. I mean, would that be the case? Like, how are you thinking about the unlock of enterprise and the impact on that linearity?

Speaker #12: Great . Thanks for the question . A couple on the enterprise opportunity . One , Blake , you were mentioning that around like the linear progression of IMM as a percentage of IRR .

Speaker #12: I guess I'm wondering , I know that wasn't like a comment about all years in the future , but I would I would expect with your positioning and kind of readiness in the enterprise for that to accelerate just because of the size of the enterprise opportunity .

Speaker #12: And now unlocking that that is there. I mean, would that be the case? Like, how are you thinking about the unlock of enterprise and the impact on that linearity?

Allan Thygesen: Why don't you go first, Blake, and I'll add.

Allan Thygesen: Why don't you go first, Blake, and I'll add.

Speaker #8: Why don't you go first.

Blake Grayson: Yeah. I think, you know, obviously for us, we've got big aspirations for enterprise. It's still early days for us there. You know, you heard a couple examples. You heard Aon's one that we're really excited about internally, and obviously externally with other ones that we've talked about. I think for us, we're just gonna have to see how this ramps over time, right? As our customers use IAM and they experiment with it and they use more of it, you can see that ramp over time, but it's a little bit like eSignature, right? You go into maybe through a division, and then you're able to expand that to more users and whatnot. I think that it's still early days for us. We're really excited about the opportunity. Our long-term success depends on growing the enterprise business.

Blake Grayson: Yeah. I think, you know, obviously for us, we've got big aspirations for enterprise. It's still early days for us there. You know, you heard a couple examples. You heard Aon's one that we're really excited about internally, and obviously externally with other ones that we've talked about. I think for us, we're just gonna have to see how this ramps over time, right? As our customers use IAM and they experiment with it and they use more of it, you can see that ramp over time, but it's a little bit like eSignature, right? You go into maybe through a division, and then you're able to expand that to more users and whatnot. I think that it's still early days for us. We're really excited about the opportunity. Our long-term success depends on growing the enterprise business.

Speaker #2: And I'll .

Speaker #3: Yeah , I think , you know , obviously for us , we've got big aspirations for enterprise . It's still early days for us there .

Speaker #3: And you know, you heard a couple of examples. You heard Ian's one that we're really excited about internally, and obviously externally with other ones we've talked about.

Speaker #3: I think for us , we're just gonna have to see how this how this ramps up over time , right ? Is that as our customers use IAM and the experiment with it and they use more of it , you can see that ramp over time , but it's a little bit like e-signature , right ?

Speaker #3: You go in through maybe a division, and then you're able to expand that to more users and whatnot. But I think that it's still early days for us.

Speaker #3: We're really excited about the opportunity , our long term success on enterprise business . We're really excited about that . And we are , you know , very heads down focused in order to drive that .

Blake Grayson: We're really excited about that, and we are, you know, very heads down focused in order to drive that. Alan, I don't know if there's more you'd like to add.

Blake Grayson: We're really excited about that, and we are, you know, very heads down focused in order to drive that. Alan, I don't know if there's more you'd like to add.

Speaker #3: And Allan, I don't know if there's more on that.

Allan Thygesen: Yeah. Just on the enterprise topic, it's really shifting into gear for us. It's contributing more of the top line mix. Over time, I expect it ultimately to become a bigger part of our business than it has been historically in eSign, just because the addressable opportunity and the pain is so much larger. Just for purposes of illustration, I just wanna double-click on the Aon example just for a second. As you can imagine, Aon being an insurance business, their product is essentially agreements. They literally process hundreds of millions of documents. They have a strategic project called Meridian, that's basically a customer portal where the customer can access all of their agreements with Aon and derive insights from those agreements.

Allan Thygesen: Yeah. Just on the enterprise topic, it's really shifting into gear for us. It's contributing more of the top line mix. Over time, I expect it ultimately to become a bigger part of our business than it has been historically in eSign, just because the addressable opportunity and the pain is so much larger. Just for purposes of illustration, I just wanna double-click on the Aon example just for a second. As you can imagine, Aon being an insurance business, their product is essentially agreements. They literally process hundreds of millions of documents. They have a strategic project called Meridian, that's basically a customer portal where the customer can access all of their agreements with Aon and derive insights from those agreements.

Speaker #2: Yeah , just on the enterprise topic , it's really shifting into gear for us . It's contributing more of the of the top line mix and , and over time , I expect it ultimately to become a bigger part of our business than it has been historically in E-sign just because the addressable opportunity , the pain is so much larger just for purposes of illustration , I just want to double click on the Aion example just for a second .

Speaker #2: So as you can imagine , Aon being an insurance business , their product is essentially agreements . They literally process hundreds of millions of documents and they have a strategic project called Meridian that's basically a customer portal where you where the customer can access all of their agreements with Aon and derive insights from those agreements .

Allan Thygesen: Of course also create opportunities for additional value for Aon. They chose Oxide to power that, and which we're honored by. That is a massively complex enterprise project and a project that is transformational in terms of the customer value proposition for Aon. It's sponsored by the highest level in the company. We're thrilled to be deeply engaged with them, and they are certainly pushing us in several areas. But that's what you want and expect from your largest customers and partners. There's a number of examples like that, but IAM was, I think, the most you know iconic of this quarter.

Allan Thygesen: Of course also create opportunities for additional value for Aon. They chose Oxide to power that, and which we're honored by. That is a massively complex enterprise project and a project that is transformational in terms of the customer value proposition for Aon. It's sponsored by the highest level in the company. We're thrilled to be deeply engaged with them, and they are certainly pushing us in several areas. But that's what you want and expect from your largest customers and partners. There's a number of examples like that, but IAM was, I think, the most you know iconic of this quarter.

Speaker #2: And of course, create opportunities for additional value for Aon. And they chose DocuSign to power that, which we're honored by.

Speaker #2: But that is a massively complex enterprise project. And a project that is transformational in terms of the customer value proposition for Aon.

Speaker #2: And so it's sponsored at the highest level in the company. We're thrilled to be deeply engaged with them, and they are certainly pushing us in several areas.

Speaker #2: But that's what you want and expect from your your largest , your largest customers and partners . And so there's a number of examples like that , but , and I think the most , you iconic of this quarter .

Blake Grayson: Really helpful. Just to stay on this topic, any way to frame the pipeline or demand for IAM specifically in the enterprise? Related, could there be any initiatives or are there any current initiatives of bringing customers onto IAM before the renewals that we're kinda just talking about with regard to the linear progression? Thanks.

Josh Baer: Really helpful. Just to stay on this topic, any way to frame the pipeline or demand for IAM specifically in the enterprise? Related, could there be any initiatives or are there any current initiatives of bringing customers onto IAM before the renewals that we're kinda just talking about with regard to the linear progression? Thanks.

Speaker #12: Really helpful and just to stay on this topic , any way to frame the pipeline or demand for Im specifically in the enterprise and related , is there could there be any initiatives or are there any current initiatives of bringing customers onto ehm , before the renewals that we are kind of just talking about with regard to the linear progression ?

Speaker #12: Thanks

Allan Thygesen: Yeah. I mean, look, it's always the case in subscription business that the renewal creates a natural focus point, shall we say, for discussions. We are absolutely working to accelerate discussions with customers who are further out from their renewal, and finding ways to do deals out of cycle. We have, you know, various contract structures to help facilitate that, as well as, you know, opportunity identification for our sales teams and for partners. As you know, enterprise sales cycles are long anyway, so you gotta start way ahead if you wanna do a big deal like an Aon-type deal. Yes, that is a focus. I don't think we'll ever be able to completely avoid the natural timing that's associated around renewals.

Allan Thygesen: Yeah. I mean, look, it's always the case in subscription business that the renewal creates a natural focus point, shall we say, for discussions. We are absolutely working to accelerate discussions with customers who are further out from their renewal, and finding ways to do deals out of cycle. We have, you know, various contract structures to help facilitate that, as well as, you know, opportunity identification for our sales teams and for partners. As you know, enterprise sales cycles are long anyway, so you gotta start way ahead if you wanna do a big deal like an Aon-type deal. Yes, that is a focus. I don't think we'll ever be able to completely avoid the natural timing that's associated around renewals.

Speaker #8: Yeah . I mean , look , it's , it's .

Speaker #2: It's , it's always the case in business that the renewal creates a natural , a focus point . I would say for , for discussions , but we are absolutely working to accelerate discussions with customers who are further out from their renewal and finding ways to , to do deals out of cycle .

Speaker #2: And we have various contract structures to help facilitate that . And as well as , you know , opportunity identification for our sales teams and for partners .

Speaker #2: And as you know , enterprise sales cycles are long anyway . So there's , you've got to start way ahead if you want to do a big deal like an AR type deal .

Speaker #2: So yes , that is a focus . I don't think we'll ever be able to completely avoid the , the natural timing . That's associated around renewals .

Allan Thygesen: It's just a fact of life, and customers also anticipate that and work towards that. We are absolutely pulling a lot of levers to, you know, enable our sales teams, our partners, and customers to have discussions as soon as customers, frankly, are ready to entertain them.

Allan Thygesen: It's just a fact of life, and customers also anticipate that and work towards that. We are absolutely pulling a lot of levers to, you know, enable our sales teams, our partners, and customers to have discussions as soon as customers, frankly, are ready to entertain them.

Speaker #2: It's just a fact of life and customers also anticipate that . And work towards that . But we are absolutely pulling a lot of levers to , you know , enable our sales teams , our partners and customers to have discussions as soon as customers , frankly , are ready to entertain them .

Josh Baer: Great. Thanks, Alan.

Josh Baer: Great. Thanks, Alan.

Speaker #12: Great . Thanks , Alan

Operator: Our next question is from Alex Zukin with Wolfe Research. Please proceed.

Operator: Our next question is from Alex Zukin with Wolfe Research. Please proceed.

Speaker #4: Our next question is from Alex Zukin with Wolfe Research. Please proceed.

Alex Zukin: Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my question. I guess maybe two quick ones for me. I'll ask the inverse of Tyler's question. If I think about the guidance around ARR, looking at the IAM flat, and that implies non-IAM ARR is going to actually get a lot meaningfully better. Just curious, what's driving kind of the confidence? Is that a gross retention dynamic continuing to improve? And then I've got a quick follow-up for Blake.

Alex Zukin: Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my question. I guess maybe two quick ones for me. I'll ask the inverse of Tyler's question. If I think about the guidance around ARR, looking at the IAM flat, and that implies non-IAM ARR is going to actually get a lot meaningfully better. Just curious, what's driving kind of the confidence? Is that a gross retention dynamic continuing to improve? And then I've got a quick follow-up for Blake.

Speaker #5: Hey , guys .

Speaker #9: Thanks for taking my question . I guess maybe two quick ones for me . I'll ask the inverse of Tyler's question . If I think about the guidance around IRR , looking at the IAM flat and that implies Non-ai , RR is going to actually get meaning is guided to get a lot meaningfully better .

Speaker #9: So, I'm just curious—what's driving kind of the confidence? Is that a gross retention dynamic continuing to improve? And then I've got a quick follow-up for Blake.

Blake Grayson: Yeah. Let me see if I can answer the question, I think, in the spirit in the way you're asking it, is that if you look at the IAM net new ARR, and you try to compare it to the company net new ARR, that can be a tricky comparison because the way to think about IAM is really not necessarily as an incremental brand new product, but it's a platform shift, right? Like, we've got a lot of customers in our install base that are moving to IAM, and remember, IAM comes with the new signature offer as well, and customers are paying for that as a part of their IAM deals that they're doing with us. You know, while IAM has many incremental features on top, it's also driving that platform shift.

Blake Grayson: Yeah. Let me see if I can answer the question, I think, in the spirit in the way you're asking it, is that if you look at the IAM net new ARR, and you try to compare it to the company net new ARR, that can be a tricky comparison because the way to think about IAM is really not necessarily as an incremental brand new product, but it's a platform shift, right? Like, we've got a lot of customers in our install base that are moving to IAM, and remember, IAM comes with the new signature offer as well, and customers are paying for that as a part of their IAM deals that they're doing with us. You know, while IAM has many incremental features on top, it's also driving that platform shift.

Speaker #3: Yeah . Let me see if I can answer the question . I think in the spirit and where you're asking it is that if you look at the I am net new RR and you try to compare it to the company , net new RR , that can be a tricky comparison because the way to think about IAM is really not necessarily as an incremental brand new product , but it's a platform shift , right ?

Speaker #3: We've got a lot of people in our install, a lot of customers in our install base, that are moving to IAM.

Speaker #3: And remember, it comes with an eSignature offer as well. And customers are paying for that as part of their IAM deals that they're doing with us.

Speaker #3: So , you know , while IAM has many incremental features on top , it's also driving that platform shift . So I encourage you to think about it as a because of that , as a platform , use total company IRR when thinking about our absolute kind of dollar growth for us , retention gains are critical .

Blake Grayson: I encourage you to think about it because of that as a platform. Use total company ARR when thinking about our absolute kind of dollar growth. For us, retention gains are critical. IAM is one of those big levers for us to be able to do that we think will play out over time, right? 'Cause you gotta get a customer to move into IAM, keep them getting excited about it, and then renew them as well. This is gonna play out, right, over years for us. I think that I'm really excited about it, but along with that too, we're making gains in our company, you know, total company retention as well, which as Allan said earlier, and I think all of you know, it's still predominantly an e-sign business.

Blake Grayson: I encourage you to think about it because of that as a platform. Use total company ARR when thinking about our absolute kind of dollar growth. For us, retention gains are critical. IAM is one of those big levers for us to be able to do that we think will play out over time, right? 'Cause you gotta get a customer to move into IAM, keep them getting excited about it, and then renew them as well. This is gonna play out, right, over years for us. I think that I'm really excited about it, but along with that too, we're making gains in our company, you know, total company retention as well, which as Allan said earlier, and I think all of you know, it's still predominantly an e-sign business.

Speaker #3: I am as one of those big levers for us to be able to do that , that we think that will play out over time , right ?

Speaker #3: Because you got to get somebody into a customer to move into . Im , keep them getting excited about it , and then renew them as well .

Speaker #3: And so this is going to play out over years for us. And I think that I'm really excited about it. But along with that too, we're making gains in our company.

Speaker #3: You know , total company retention as well , which as Allen said earlier , and I think all of you know , it's still predominantly in business .

Blake Grayson: For us, those two things matter a lot. I'm really excited to be able to improve upon the gains that we made this year and get even bigger ones next year.

Blake Grayson: For us, those two things matter a lot. I'm really excited to be able to improve upon the gains that we made this year and get even bigger ones next year.

Speaker #3: And so for us, those two things matter a lot. I'm really excited to be able to improve upon the gains that we made this year and get even bigger ones next year.

Alex Zukin: Understood. Maybe just with respect to the consumption-based pricing that you guys are introducing, I guess how much of the IAM ARR in the year that you're guiding to do you expect to be coming from consumption or are you not including any of that in the guide? Kinda how do we think about that progression as it applies to NRR improvements gradually throughout the year?

Alex Zukin: Understood. Maybe just with respect to the consumption-based pricing that you guys are introducing, I guess how much of the IAM ARR in the year that you're guiding to do you expect to be coming from consumption or are you not including any of that in the guide? Kinda how do we think about that progression as it applies to NRR improvements gradually throughout the year?

Speaker #9: Understood . And then maybe just with respect to the consumption based pricing that you guys are introducing , I guess , how much of the IAM are in the year that you're guiding to ?

Speaker #9: Do you expect to be coming from consumption or is are you not including any of that in the guide ? And , and how do we think about that progression as it applies to Nr improvements gradually throughout the year ?

Blake Grayson: We're launching subscription consumption-based pricing. I would say the consumption element is all part of our ARR forecast, whether it's consumption or seats or not. I would encourage you to think about it that way. Like Alan said, this is a lot akin to what we do with envelopes today, right? That a person, a customer signs up for a subscription, and then they get a capacity that they can utilize against it. I don't think there's any big swing necessarily just because of the pricing plan. I think it's gonna give us an opportunity to appeal to a lot more of these enterprise customers, and I think that's the best way for us to be able to increase usage, you know, over time.

Speaker #3: So this is a , we're launching subscription consumption based pricing . So I would say the consumption element is all part of our AR for our forecast , whether it's consumption or seats or not .

Blake Grayson: We're launching subscription consumption-based pricing. I would say the consumption element is all part of our ARR forecast, whether it's consumption or seats or not. I would encourage you to think about it that way. Like Alan said, this is a lot akin to what we do with envelopes today, right? That a person, a customer signs up for a subscription, and then they get a capacity that they can utilize against it. I don't think there's any big swing necessarily just because of the pricing plan. I think it's gonna give us an opportunity to appeal to a lot more of these enterprise customers, and I think that's the best way for us to be able to increase usage, you know, over time.

Speaker #3: And so I would encourage you to think about it that way. Like Allan said, this is a lot akin to what we do with envelopes today, right?

Speaker #3: A person, a customer, signs up for a subscription and then they get a capacity that they can utilize against it. So I don't think there's any big swing necessarily just because of the pricing.

Speaker #3: I think it's going to give us an opportunity to appeal to a lot more of these enterprise customers. And I think that's the best way for us to be able to increase usage over time.

Allan Thygesen: I agree with all that, and I'd just say, look, it's primarily relevant in the enterprise space, which is a smaller but accelerating part of our business. Of course, it does lend itself to, as you implied in your question, you know, potentially realize more, you know, growth over time in accounts because you already have the pricing mechanism installed, and it's sort of easier to say, "Well, you just need more credits." Let's see where it goes. For this year, it's important for the enterprise go-to-market, and probably somewhat meaningful for the overall business, but not the primary driver.

Allan Thygesen: I agree with all that, and I'd just say, look, it's primarily relevant in the enterprise space, which is a smaller but accelerating part of our business. Of course, it does lend itself to, as you implied in your question, you know, potentially realize more, you know, growth over time in accounts because you already have the pricing mechanism installed, and it's sort of easier to say, "Well, you just need more credits." Let's see where it goes. For this year, it's important for the enterprise go-to-market, and probably somewhat meaningful for the overall business, but not the primary driver.

Speaker #3: Yeah .

Speaker #2: I agree with all that . And I just say , look , it's primarily relevant in the enterprise space , which is a smaller part , smaller , but accelerating part of our business .

Speaker #2: And of course , it does lend itself to , as you implied in your question , potentially realize more growth over time in accounts because you already have the pricing mechanism installed and it's sort of easier to say , well , it's just need more credits .

Speaker #2: And so let's see , let's see where it goes for this year . It's , it's important for the enterprise go to market and probably somewhat meaningful for , for the overall business , but not , not the primary driver

Alex Zukin: Got it. Thanks, guys.

Alex Zukin: Got it. Thanks, guys.

Operator: Our next question is from Rishi Jaluria with RBC Capital Markets. Please proceed.

Operator: Our next question is from Rishi Jaluria with RBC Capital Markets. Please proceed.

Speaker #9: Thanks guys

Speaker #4: Our next question is from Rishi Deloria with RBC Capital Markets. Please proceed.

Rishi Jaluria: Oh, wonderful. Thanks so much for taking my questions. Maybe to start, you know, not to keep harping on the ARR kind of question, but I guess just kinda taking at face value, right? You're guiding to effectively non-IAM ARR being flat. IAM ARR growing, you know, hyper growth, call it 70, 80 percent, depending on the assumptions we make. I get that there's a conversion element from it, right? Maybe I'll ask a question that we've been trying to figure out for a while, and hopefully you have a decent amount of telemetry to make kind of some sort of preliminary indication.

Rishi Jaluria: Oh, wonderful. Thanks so much for taking my questions. Maybe to start, you know, not to keep harping on the ARR kind of question, but I guess just kinda taking at face value, right? You're guiding to effectively non-IAM ARR being flat. IAM ARR growing, you know, hyper growth, call it 70, 80 percent, depending on the assumptions we make. I get that there's a conversion element from it, right? Maybe I'll ask a question that we've been trying to figure out for a while, and hopefully you have a decent amount of telemetry to make kind of some sort of preliminary indication.

Speaker #10: Oh , wonderful .

Speaker #13: Thanks so much for taking my questions . Maybe to start , you know , not not to keep harping on the IRR kind of question , but I guess just kind of taking it face value , right ?

Speaker #13: You're guiding to effectively , you know , Non-ai non IRR being flat . I am a growing , you know , hyper growth , call it , call it 70 , 80% , depending on the assumptions we make .

Speaker #13: I get that there's a conversion element from it , right . And so maybe I'll ask the question that we've , we've been trying to figure out for a while and hopefully you have a decent amount of telemetry to make kind of some sort of preliminary indication , but just wanted to get a sense what sort of pattern of behaviors do you see in terms of overall ACV , TCV , LTM , whatever , sorry , LTV , whatever metric you want to use , but just in terms of so far as you take in existing customers , move them from just the core e-signature to the IAM platform , how much higher does that spending look like ?

Rishi Jaluria: Just wanted to get a sense, what sort of pattern of behaviors do you see in terms of overall ACV, PCV, LTM, LTV, like, whatever metric we wanna use. Just in terms of so far as you've taken existing customers, moved them from Vista Core eSignature to the IAM platform, how much higher does that spending look like? I've got a quick follow-up. Thanks.

Rishi Jaluria: Just wanted to get a sense, what sort of pattern of behaviors do you see in terms of overall ACV, PCV, LTM, LTV, like, whatever metric we wanna use. Just in terms of so far as you've taken existing customers, moved them from Vista Core eSignature to the IAM platform, how much higher does that spending look like? I've got a quick follow-up. Thanks.

Blake Grayson: Sure. Yeah. I mean, our focus continues to be, you know, on driving our dollar net retention rate up. We're gonna do that in large part by making IAM the foundation, not only of our expansion strategy, but also our retention strategy going forward. Talking about expansion rates and stuff gets pretty tricky when you start to balance those components in. We are seeing, you know, in general and in the vast majority of cases, an expansion opportunity for our customers that are coming in. We're not breaking that out, but we also need to see the early renewal cohort customers, and, you know, we're encouraged, like I said earlier about that. It's something that for us, for IAM in total, it provides an expansion and a retention opportunity, but we're not breaking out the expansion rates right now.

Blake Grayson: Sure. Yeah. I mean, our focus continues to be, you know, on driving our dollar net retention rate up. We're gonna do that in large part by making IAM the foundation, not only of our expansion strategy, but also our retention strategy going forward. Talking about expansion rates and stuff gets pretty tricky when you start to balance those components in. We are seeing, you know, in general and in the vast majority of cases, an expansion opportunity for our customers that are coming in. We're not breaking that out, but we also need to see the early renewal cohort customers, and, you know, we're encouraged, like I said earlier about that. It's something that for us, for IAM in total, it provides an expansion and a retention opportunity, but we're not breaking out the expansion rates right now.

Speaker #13: And then I've got a quick follow-up. Thanks.

Speaker #3: Sure . Yeah . I mean , our focus continues to be on driving our dollar net retention rate up . And that's we're going to do that in large part by I am the foundation not only of our expansion strategy , but also our retention strategy going forward .

Speaker #3: So talking about expansion rates , gets pretty tricky when you start to balance those components . And we are seeing , you know , in general in the vast majority of cases , an expansion opportunity for our customers that are coming in .

Speaker #3: We're not breaking that out . But we also need to see the early renewal customers . And , you know , we're encouraged .

Speaker #3: Like I said earlier about that , but it's something that for us , for I am in total , it provides an expansion and a retention opportunity .

Speaker #3: But we're not breaking out the expansion rates right now.

Rishi Jaluria: Understood. That's helpful. Maybe just thinking, going back to some of the partnerships that you have, you know, with Anthropic. You've got one with OpenAI. We've seen you highlighted on stage with them over the past several months. It's coming at a time where clearly investors are worried about potential competition, either from DIY using those platforms or directly from the platforms themselves. Can you maybe talk a little bit about, you know, how is your conversation with both of those and any other model providers as well, because I know you have the ability to work with most models out there.

Rishi Jaluria: Understood. That's helpful. Maybe just thinking, going back to some of the partnerships that you have, you know, with Anthropic. You've got one with OpenAI. We've seen you highlighted on stage with them over the past several months. It's coming at a time where clearly investors are worried about potential competition, either from DIY using those platforms or directly from the platforms themselves. Can you maybe talk a little bit about, you know, how is your conversation with both of those and any other model providers as well, because I know you have the ability to work with most models out there.

Speaker #13: Understood . That's helpful . And then maybe just thinking , going back to some of the partnerships that you have , you know , with anthropic , you've got one with OpenAI .

Speaker #13: We've seen you highlighted on stage with them over the past several months. And this is coming at a time where, clearly, investors are worried about potential competition, either from DIY or using those platforms, or directly from the platforms themselves.

Speaker #13: Can you maybe talk a little bit about, you know, how is your conversation with both of those and any other model providers as well?

Rishi Jaluria: Just how those conversations have kind of shaped over time and how you've been able to double down on a lot of the things that have made you successful in shaping the nature of the partnership. Thanks so much.

Rishi Jaluria: Just how those conversations have kind of shaped over time and how you've been able to double down on a lot of the things that have made you successful in shaping the nature of the partnership. Thanks so much.

Speaker #13: Because I know you have the ability to work with most models out there, but just how those conversations have kind of shaped over time and how you've been able to double down on a lot of things that have made you successful in shaping the niche of the partnership.

Allan Thygesen: Yeah, thanks. You know, the reality is, I think every provider of chatbot, you know, the leading ones like OpenAI and probably Google, but there are many others who are aiming to provide a chat interface to their customers. As they think about how do I provide value to that chatbot? One of the most important data elements that you wanna expose and processes that you wanna kick off is agreements. We've had a lot of inbound interest. Every major provider of models, you know, is interested in partnering with us on this, which is reflected in those announcements. There'll be more like that.

Allan Thygesen: Yeah, thanks. You know, the reality is, I think every provider of chatbot, you know, the leading ones like OpenAI and probably Google, but there are many others who are aiming to provide a chat interface to their customers. As they think about how do I provide value to that chatbot? One of the most important data elements that you wanna expose and processes that you wanna kick off is agreements. We've had a lot of inbound interest. Every major provider of models, you know, is interested in partnering with us on this, which is reflected in those announcements. There'll be more like that.

Speaker #13: Thanks so much .

Speaker #2: Yeah , thanks . You know , the reality is , I think every provider of , of chatbot , you know , the , the leading ones like OpenAI and anthropic and Google , but , but there are many others who are aiming to provide a chat interface to their customers .

Speaker #2: And if they think about, how do I provide value in that chatbot? One of the most important data you want to expose and process, that you want to kick off, is agreements.

Speaker #2: And so we've had a lot of inbound interest . Every major provider of models , you know , is interested in partnering with us on this , which is reflected in those announcements .

Allan Thygesen: I just think we are well-positioned, you know, as the system of record for agreements, as well as a system of action. We can power those actions through our own interface, through third-party agentic interfaces or third-party applications like Salesforce, SAP, and Workday. I'm very bullish on our position as the authority and logical top partner for companies with ambitions to retrieve agreement data, kick off agreement processes, complete them. We're a good partner for that, and I think that's reflected in what you see in the public news.

Allan Thygesen: I just think we are well-positioned, you know, as the system of record for agreements, as well as a system of action. We can power those actions through our own interface, through third-party agentic interfaces or third-party applications like Salesforce, SAP, and Workday. I'm very bullish on our position as the authority and logical top partner for companies with ambitions to retrieve agreement data, kick off agreement processes, complete them. We're a good partner for that, and I think that's reflected in what you see in the public news.

Speaker #2: And there'll be more like that . And so I just think we are we are well positioned . The , you know , system of record for agreements as well as a system of action .

Speaker #2: And we can power those actions through our own interface , through third party interfaces or third party applications like Salesforce and S&P . And workday and I'm , I'm very bullish on our position as the authority and logical top partner for companies with ambitions to retrieve agreement data , kick off agreement processes , complete them .

Speaker #2: We're a good partner for that, and I think that's reflected in what you're seeing in the public news.

Rishi Jaluria: Very helpful. Thank you.

Rishi Jaluria: Very helpful. Thank you.

Operator: Our next question is from Scott Berg with Needham & Company. Please proceed.

Operator: Our next question is from Scott Berg with Needham & Company. Please proceed.

Speaker #13: Very helpful . Thank you

Speaker #4: Our next question is from Scott Berg with Needham & Company. Please proceed.

John Avrizon: Hi, this is John Avrizon for Scott. One question for us. We noticed the company is conducting some A/B testing on self-serve eSignature plans. Have any pricing changes been incorporated into the fiscal 2027 guidance?

John Gabrieli: Hi, this is John Avrizon for Scott. One question for us. We noticed the company is conducting some A/B testing on self-serve eSignature plans. Have any pricing changes been incorporated into the fiscal 2027 guidance?

Speaker #14: Hi , this is John on for Scott . us . We noticed the company is conducting some a B testing on self-serve e-signature plans .

Speaker #14: Have any pricing changes been incorporated into the fiscal '27 guidance?

Blake Grayson: Well, I'll take a stab at that one. You wanna add on, go ahead. You know, our guidance reflects all of our plans for this fiscal year, including tests like that. Like, we're testing that at the moment, and we'll see how it goes. We're excited about it, but the guidance is a reflection of the plans that we have for this next fiscal year.

Blake Grayson: Well, I'll take a stab at that one. You wanna add on, go ahead. You know, our guidance reflects all of our plans for this fiscal year, including tests like that. Like, we're testing that at the moment, and we'll see how it goes. We're excited about it, but the guidance is a reflection of the plans that we have for this next fiscal year.

Speaker #3: Well , I'll take a stab at that . You want to add on . Go ahead . You know , our guidance reflects all of our plans for this fiscal year , including tests like that .

Speaker #3: Like, we're testing that at the moment, and we'll see how it goes. We're excited about it. But the guidance is a reflection of the plans that we have for this next fiscal year.

Allan Thygesen: Yeah. I mean, we're in a digital business, you're constantly testing all kinds of new pricing and packaging, and this is just one of those that we're doing in a couple of geographies. I don't know, we'll see which ones work, and we'll scale. Thank you.

Allan Thygesen: Yeah. I mean, we're in a digital business, you're constantly testing all kinds of new pricing and packaging, and this is just one of those that we're doing in a couple of geographies. I don't know, we'll see which ones work, and we'll scale. Thank you.

Speaker #3: Yeah .

Speaker #2: We we're in a digital business . You're constantly testing all kinds of new pricing and packaging . And this is just one of those that we're doing a couple of geographies and we'll , we'll see which ones work .

Speaker #2: And we'll still

Operator: Our next question is from Brent Thill with Jefferies. Please proceed.

Operator: Our next question is from Brent Thill with Jefferies. Please proceed.

Speaker #14: Great . Thank you .

Speaker #4: Our next question is from Brent Thill with Jefferies. Please proceed.

John Byun: Hi. Thank you. This is John Byun for Brent Thill. Had a question on AI. I mean, wondering which features were you seeing the most traction or momentum? Also whether you're seeing any meaningful usage or volume or leads through the chatbot. Thank you.

John Byun: Hi. Thank you. This is John Byun for Brent Thill. Had a question on AI. I mean, wondering which features were you seeing the most traction or momentum? Also whether you're seeing any meaningful usage or volume or leads through the chatbot. Thank you.

Speaker #15: Hi . Thank you . This is John from Brent Thill . I had a question on on AI . I mean , wondering which features are were you seeing the most traction or momentum ?

Speaker #15: And also, whether you're seeing any meaningful usage or volume or leads through the chatbots? Thank you.

Allan Thygesen: Yeah. On the first point, look, the foundational major AI platform feature we launched was Navigator, which gives you access to your repository agreements. I think that still powers a tremendous amount of value for customers of all sizes. It's really remarkable how many different ways people find value from that. But we're now increasingly delivering AI-enabled features across the agreement journey. For example, we have automated agreement review. That's, I think, becoming a very expected thing where you'll see automated you know data validation, automated use of AI for identity verification and for risk assessment. We've launched a number of features in that area over the last six months.

Allan Thygesen: Yeah. On the first point, look, the foundational major AI platform feature we launched was Navigator, which gives you access to your repository agreements. I think that still powers a tremendous amount of value for customers of all sizes. It's really remarkable how many different ways people find value from that. But we're now increasingly delivering AI-enabled features across the agreement journey. For example, we have automated agreement review. That's, I think, becoming a very expected thing where you'll see automated you know data validation, automated use of AI for identity verification and for risk assessment. We've launched a number of features in that area over the last six months.

Speaker #2: Yeah . On the first on the first point , look , the foundational major AI platform features was navigator , which gives you access to your repository agreements .

Speaker #2: I think that still powers a tremendous amount of value for customers of all sizes. It's really remarkable how many different ways people find value from that.

Speaker #2: But we're now increasingly delivering AI enabled features across the agreement journey . So for example , we , we have automated agreement review .

Speaker #2: That's , I think , becoming a very expected thing . We are , you'll see automated , you know , data validation , automated use of AI for identity verification and for risk assessment .

Allan Thygesen: Really across the board, AI is wherever we can use that to power more value for customers, we're gonna do that. You can see that now across the various stages of the journey and in different functional workflows. There's so much more to come here. I'm very optimistic that this is gonna power value delivery and innovation for us for a while.

Allan Thygesen: Really across the board, AI is wherever we can use that to power more value for customers, we're gonna do that. You can see that now across the various stages of the journey and in different functional workflows. There's so much more to come here. I'm very optimistic that this is gonna power value delivery and innovation for us for a while.

Speaker #2: We've launched a number of features in that area over the last six months. So really, across the board, AI is—whatever we can use that to power more value for customers.

Speaker #2: We're going to do that. And you can see that now across the various stages of the journey and in different functional workflows.

Speaker #2: And there's so much more to come here. So I'm very optimistic that this is going to power value delivery and innovation for us for a while.

Operator: Our next question is from Patrick McElwee with William Blair. Please proceed.

Operator: Our next question is from Patrick McElwee with William Blair. Please proceed.

Speaker #4: Our next question is from Patrick McElwee with William Blair. Please proceed.

Patrick McElwee: Good afternoon, Allan and Blake. Thank you for taking my questions. One more on IAM. It's great to hear you're expecting absolute ARR from that product to nearly double this year. I understand a lot of that growth is coming from existing customers transitioning, but can you just provide a quick update on what type of traction you're seeing in going out and winning net new customers with those incremental capabilities? As we think about that, how you feel this solution is competing against other CLM vendors and broader workflow platforms?

Patrick McIlwee: Good afternoon, Allan and Blake. Thank you for taking my questions. One more on IAM. It's great to hear you're expecting absolute ARR from that product to nearly double this year. I understand a lot of that growth is coming from existing customers transitioning, but can you just provide a quick update on what type of traction you're seeing in going out and winning net new customers with those incremental capabilities? As we think about that, how you feel this solution is competing against other CLM vendors and broader workflow platforms?

Speaker #9: Hi . Good afternoon , Allen and Blake . Thank you for taking my questions . One more on IAM . It's great to hear your expecting absolute IRR from that product to nearly double this year .

Speaker #9: And I understand a lot of that growth is coming from existing customers transitioning. But can you just provide a quick update on what type of traction you're seeing in going out and winning?

Speaker #9: Net new customers with those incremental capabilities? And as we think about that, how do you feel this solution is competing against other CSM vendors and broader workflow platforms?

Allan Thygesen: Yeah. I think that's going extremely well. It's an even larger part of our NewCo dollars than of normal renewals. I think, you know, when you come in fresh, you get to position all the exciting things IAM has to offer, whereas with some eSign customers, they may have an existing perception of what's possible with agreements or what we can deliver for them, and you need to change those perceptions. NewCo will continue to be a core element of DocuSign's growth. You know, of course, all of our customers start as new customers, and many of them started as small customers and grew into very large customers. That's an essential acquisition pipeline that we continue to invest in.

Allan Thygesen: Yeah. I think that's going extremely well. It's an even larger part of our NewCo dollars than of normal renewals. I think, you know, when you come in fresh, you get to position all the exciting things IAM has to offer, whereas with some eSign customers, they may have an existing perception of what's possible with agreements or what we can deliver for them, and you need to change those perceptions. NewCo will continue to be a core element of DocuSign's growth. You know, of course, all of our customers start as new customers, and many of them started as small customers and grew into very large customers. That's an essential acquisition pipeline that we continue to invest in.

Speaker #3: Yeah .

Speaker #2: I think that's going well . It's an even larger part of , of our new code dollars than of normal renewals . And I think , you know , when you come in , come in fresh , you get to position all the exciting things that it has to offer .

Speaker #2: Whereas with some customers, they may have an existing perception of what's possible with agreements or what we can deliver for them. And you need to change those perceptions. I knew Co will continue to be a core element of DocuSign, Inc. growth.

Speaker #2: You know, of course, all of our customers start as new customers, and many of them started as small customers and grew into very large customers.

Allan Thygesen: With all that said, the primary focus of our go-to-market with IAM is with existing customers, and that's the vast majority of our IAM revenue. You know, it's a huge advantage for DocuSign that we walk in, we already have your agreements, we're already a trusted supplier, we're already generally very well-perceived because of the quality of the sign product and the experience customers have. That's an amazing starting point for delivering value and for processing their agreements with AI that's unmatched by any other company. You know, I think we have a lot of data and product advantages. We also have huge distribution advantages, and that might not be as fully understood.

Allan Thygesen: With all that said, the primary focus of our go-to-market with IAM is with existing customers, and that's the vast majority of our IAM revenue. You know, it's a huge advantage for DocuSign that we walk in, we already have your agreements, we're already a trusted supplier, we're already generally very well-perceived because of the quality of the sign product and the experience customers have. That's an amazing starting point for delivering value and for processing their agreements with AI that's unmatched by any other company. You know, I think we have a lot of data and product advantages. We also have huge distribution advantages, and that might not be as fully understood.

Speaker #2: And so that's an essential acquisition pipeline that we continue to invest in with all that said , the primary focus of our go to market with Im is with existing customers .

Speaker #2: And that's the vast majority of our IM revenue. And, you know, it's a huge advantage for DocuSign that we walk in.

Speaker #2: We already have your agreements , we're already a trusted supplier . We're already generally very well perceived because of the of the of the side product and the experience customers have .

Speaker #2: And that's an amazing starting point for delivering value and for processing their agreements with AI. That's unmatched by any other company. So I think we have a lot of data and product advantages.

Speaker #2: We also have huge distribution advantages, and that might not be as fully understood, but you can start to see that really come into play here with the number of customers that we've already brought on to a new AI platform, and the number of agreements that we've ingested and processed.

Allan Thygesen: You can start to see that really come into play, you know, with the number of customers that we've already brought onto our new AI platform and number of agreements that we've ingested and processed.

Allan Thygesen: You can start to see that really come into play, you know, with the number of customers that we've already brought onto our new AI platform and number of agreements that we've ingested and processed.

David Brown: Okay. Great. Thank you. Just quickly, you touched on it in the prepared remarks, but the flat guidance for operating margins. I understand you're reinvesting some efficiencies from the go-to-market side and R&D. Is there any context you can provide on what those investments are geared towards or what capabilities?

Allan Thygesen: Okay. Great. Thank you. Just quickly, you touched on it in the prepared remarks, but the flat guidance for operating margins. I understand you're reinvesting some efficiencies from the go-to-market side and R&D. Is there any context you can provide on what those investments are geared towards or what capabilities?

Speaker #9: Okay , great . Thank you . And just quickly , you touched on it in the prepared remarks , but the flat guidance for operating margins , understand your your reinvesting some efficiencies from the go to market side and R&D .

Speaker #9: Is there any context you can provide on what those investments are geared towards or what capabilities you're looking at as you invest there ?

Allan Thygesen: Yeah.

Allan Thygesen: Yeah.

David Brown: -you're looking at as you invest there?

Allan Thygesen: -you're looking at as you invest there?

Allan Thygesen: Yeah. Maybe just first for context, I know you all know this, but I'm just gonna repeat it anyway. We've gone from 20% operating margins to 30% operating margins over the last 3 years. We've grown revenue 30% while we've dropped head count 15%. I think DocuSign has been already on some of the efficiency improvements that we're all seeking. I think the decision we made in planning for this year is that we're right-sized for the opportunity ahead and the growth acceleration opportunity that we have. That doesn't mean that we're not reprioritizing aggressively inside the company. We continue to seek incremental efficiency in our go-to-market motion. I think we've done a lot there, and there's gonna be more opportunities.

Allan Thygesen: Yeah. Maybe just first for context, I know you all know this, but I'm just gonna repeat it anyway. We've gone from 20% operating margins to 30% operating margins over the last 3 years. We've grown revenue 30% while we've dropped head count 15%. I think DocuSign has been already on some of the efficiency improvements that we're all seeking. I think the decision we made in planning for this year is that we're right-sized for the opportunity ahead and the growth acceleration opportunity that we have. That doesn't mean that we're not reprioritizing aggressively inside the company. We continue to seek incremental efficiency in our go-to-market motion. I think we've done a lot there, and there's gonna be more opportunities.

Speaker #2: Yeah , maybe first for context , I know you all know this , but I'm just going to repeat it anyway . We we've gone from 20% operating margins to 30% operating margin over the last three years , grown revenue , 30% .

Speaker #2: While we got 13%. So I think DocuSign has already been on some of the efficiency improvements that we're all seeking. I think the decision that we made in planning for this year is that we're right-sized for the opportunity ahead and the growth acceleration opportunity that we have. That doesn't mean that we're not reprioritizing aggressively inside the company.

Speaker #2: So we continue to seek incremental efficiency in our go to market motion . We've done a lot there and there's there's going to be more opportunities .

Allan Thygesen: We're investing some of that in our product and technology organization. The areas that we're investing in, you know, enterprise and AI, continued acceleration of our legal tech roadmap, federal. US federal is a big opportunity for us. Those are examples of things. Security continues to be a key investment area. Those are five areas that got sort of incremental funding on top of baseline freed up by some of the efficiencies in other functions.

Allan Thygesen: We're investing some of that in our product and technology organization. The areas that we're investing in, you know, enterprise and AI, continued acceleration of our legal tech roadmap, federal. US federal is a big opportunity for us. Those are examples of things. Security continues to be a key investment area. Those are five areas that got sort of incremental funding on top of baseline freed up by some of the efficiencies in other functions.

Speaker #2: And then we're investing some of that in our product and technology organization. Areas that we're investing in—enterprise and AI—continue to accelerate our legal tech roadmap.

Speaker #2: Federal, US federal is a big opportunity for us. So those are examples of things—security continues to be a key investment area.

Speaker #2: Those are five areas that got sort of incremental funding on top of baseline, freed up by some of the efficiencies in other functions.

David Brown: Got it. Very clear. Thank you both for the thoughts.

Allan Thygesen: Got it. Very clear. Thank you both for the thoughts.

Operator: There are no further questions at this time. I would like to turn the conference back over to Allan for closing remarks.

Operator: There are no further questions at this time. I would like to turn the conference back over to Allan for closing remarks.

Speaker #9: Got it. Very clear. Thank you both for the thoughts.

Speaker #4: There are no further questions at this time. I would like to turn the conference back over to Allan for closing remarks.

Allan Thygesen: Thank you, operator, and thank you to all who joined today's call. In closing, we are very excited about the value IAM is delivering to customers in their workflows and through our AI innovation. We will be positioned to begin accelerating the business in 2026 or fiscal 2027 while generating strong efficiency and profitability. Thanks for your support. Look forward to talking next quarter.

Allan Thygesen: Thank you, operator, and thank you to all who joined today's call. In closing, we are very excited about the value IAM is delivering to customers in their workflows and through our AI innovation. We will be positioned to begin accelerating the business in 2026 or fiscal 2027 while generating strong efficiency and profitability. Thanks for your support. Look forward to talking next quarter.

Speaker #2: Thank you, operator, and thank you to all who joined today's call. In closing, we are very excited about the value I am delivering to customers and their workflows.

Speaker #2: And through our AI innovation, we're positioned to begin accelerating the business in 2026 or fiscal '27, while generating strong efficiency and profitability. Thanks for your support.

Operator: Thank you. This will conclude today's conference. You may disconnect at this time, and thank you for your participation.

Operator: Thank you. This will conclude today's conference. You may disconnect at this time, and thank you for your participation.

Speaker #2: Look forward to talking next quarter.

Q4 2026 DocuSign Inc Earnings Call

Demo

Docusign

Earnings

Q4 2026 DocuSign Inc Earnings Call

DOCU

Tuesday, March 17th, 2026 at 9:00 PM

Transcript

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