Q4 2026 Zoom Video Communications Inc Earnings Call

Speaker #1: You have joined the meeting as an attendee and will be muted throughout the meeting.

[Company Representative] (Zoom Communications): You have joined the meeting as an attendee and will be muted throughout the meeting. Hello, we will get started in just a moment. Hello, everyone, and welcome to Zoom's Q4 FY 2026 Earnings Release Webinar. I will now hand things over to Charles Evislage, Head of Investor Relations. Charles, over to you.

Operator: You have joined the meeting as an attendee and will be muted throughout the meeting. Hello, we will get started in just a moment. Hello, everyone, and welcome to Zoom's Q4 FY 2026 Earnings Release Webinar. I will now hand things over to Charles Evislage, Head of Investor Relations. Charles, over to you.

Speaker #2: Hello, we will get started in just a moment. Hello everyone, and welcome to Zoom's Q4 FY2026 earnings release webinar. I will now hand things over to Charles Eveslage, Head of Investor Relations.

Speaker #2: Charles, over to you.

Speaker #3: Thank you, Catherine. Hello everyone and welcome to Zoom's earnings video webinar for the fourth quarter and full fiscal year 2026. I'm joined today by Zoom's founder and CEO, Eric Yuan, and Zoom's CFO, Michelle Chang.

Charles Evislage: Thank you, Catherine. Hello, everyone, and welcome to Zoom's earnings video webinar for the Q4 and full fiscal year 2026. I'm joined today by Zoom's founder and CEO, Eric Yuan, and Zoom's CFO, Michelle Chang. Our earnings release was issued today after the market closed and may be downloaded from the Investor Relations page at investors.zoom.us. Also, on this page, you'll be able to find a copy of today's prepared remarks and a slide deck with financial highlights that, along with our earnings release, include a reconciliation of GAAP to non-GAAP financial results. These measures should not be considered in isolation from or as a substitute for financial information prepared in accordance with GAAP.

Charles Evislage: Thank you, Catherine. Hello, everyone, and welcome to Zoom's earnings video webinar for the Q4 and full fiscal year 2026. I'm joined today by Zoom's founder and CEO, Eric Yuan, and Zoom's CFO, Michelle Chang. Our earnings release was issued today after the market closed and may be downloaded from the Investor Relations page at investors.zoom.us. Also, on this page, you'll be able to find a copy of today's prepared remarks and a slide deck with financial highlights that, along with our earnings release, include a reconciliation of GAAP to non-GAAP financial results. These measures should not be considered in isolation from or as a substitute for financial information prepared in accordance with GAAP.

Speaker #3: Our earnings release was issued today after the market closed and may be downloaded from the Investor Relations page at investors.zoom.com. Also, on this page, you'll be able to find a copy of today's prepared remarks and a slide deck with financial highlights that, along with our earnings release, include a reconciliation of GAAP-to-non-GAAP financial results.

Speaker #3: These measures should not be considered in isolation from or as a substitute for financial information prepared in accordance with gap. During this call, we will make forward-looking statements, including statements regarding our financial outlook for the first quarter and full fiscal year 2027, our expectations regarding financial and business trends, impacts from the macroeconomic environment, our market position, stock repurchase program, opportunities, go-to-market initiatives, growth strategy, and business aspirations, and product initiatives, including future product and feature releases and the expected benefits of such initiatives.

Charles Evislage: During this call, we will make forward-looking statements, including statements regarding our financial outlook for Q1 and full fiscal year 2027, our expectations regarding financial and business trends, impacts from the macroeconomic environment, our market position, stock repurchase program, opportunities, go-to-market initiatives, growth strategy and business aspirations, and product initiatives, including future product and feature releases and the expected benefits of such initiatives. These statements are only predictions that are based on what we believe today, and actual results may differ materially. These forward-looking statements are subject to risks and other factors that could affect our performance and financial results, which we discuss in detail in our filings with the SEC, including our annual report on Form 10-K and quarterly reports on Form 10-Q. Zoom assumes no obligation to update any forward-looking statements we may make on today's webinar.

Charles Evislage: During this call, we will make forward-looking statements, including statements regarding our financial outlook for Q1 and full fiscal year 2027, our expectations regarding financial and business trends, impacts from the macroeconomic environment, our market position, stock repurchase program, opportunities, go-to-market initiatives, growth strategy and business aspirations, and product initiatives, including future product and feature releases and the expected benefits of such initiatives. These statements are only predictions that are based on what we believe today, and actual results may differ materially. These forward-looking statements are subject to risks and other factors that could affect our performance and financial results, which we discuss in detail in our filings with the SEC, including our annual report on Form 10-K and quarterly reports on Form 10-Q. Zoom assumes no obligation to update any forward-looking statements we may make on today's webinar.

Speaker #3: These statements are only predictions that are based on what we believe today, and actual results may differ materially. These forward-looking statements are subject to risks and other factors that could affect our performance and financial results, which we discuss in detail in our filings with the SEC, including our annual report on Form 10-K and quarterly reports on Form 10-Q.

Speaker #3: Zoom assumes no obligation to update any forward-looking statements we may make on today's webinar. And with that, let me turn the discussion over to Eric, who's giving his prepared remarks via Zoom custom avatar.

Charles Evislage: With that, let me turn the discussion over to Eric, who's giving his prepared remarks via Zoom Custom Avatars.

Charles Evislage: With that, let me turn the discussion over to Eric, who's giving his prepared remarks via Zoom Custom Avatars.

Speaker #4: Thank you, Charles. FY26 was a pivotal year for Zoom and for our industry. We grew Q4 revenue 5.3%, and full year FY26 revenue 4.4%, an acceleration of 130 basis points over FY25.

Eric Yuan: Thank you, Charles. FY 2026 was a pivotal year for Zoom and for our industry. We grew Q4 revenue 5.3% and full year FY 2026 revenue 4.4%, an acceleration of 130 basis points over FY 2025. These results reflect the increasing value of our platform with innovations like AI Companion 3.0, as our platform expands and evolves into an AI-powered system of action for modern work. The inflection in growth reflects a structural shift in the market.... Organizations are moving beyond systems of record and engagement toward AI-driven systems of action that help customers and employees get real work done. Zoom is uniquely positioned to lead this transition. We bridge work both inside and outside the organization, across collaboration, customer experience, and employee experience, using AI to take conversations all the way to completion.

Eric Yuan: Thank you, Charles. FY 2026 was a pivotal year for Zoom and for our industry. We grew Q4 revenue 5.3% and full year FY 2026 revenue 4.4%, an acceleration of 130 basis points over FY 2025. These results reflect the increasing value of our platform with innovations like AI Companion 3.0, as our platform expands and evolves into an AI-powered system of action for modern work. The inflection in growth reflects a structural shift in the market.... Organizations are moving beyond systems of record and engagement toward AI-driven systems of action that help customers and employees get real work done. Zoom is uniquely positioned to lead this transition. We bridge work both inside and outside the organization, across collaboration, customer experience, and employee experience, using AI to take conversations all the way to completion.

Speaker #4: These results reflect the increasing value of our platform, with innovations like AI companion 3.0 as our platform expands and evolves into an AI-powered system of action for modern work.

Speaker #4: The inflection in growth reflects a structural shift in the market. Organizations are moving beyond systems of record and engagement toward AI-driven systems of action that help customers and employees get real work done. Zoom is uniquely positioned to lead this transition.

Speaker #4: We bridge work both inside and outside the organization, across collaboration, customer experience, and employee experience, using AI to take conversations all the way to completion.

Speaker #4: And this directly connects to the three priorities we outlined last quarter to bring this system of action to life. First, elevate the workplace with AI.

Eric Yuan: This directly connects to the 3 priorities we outlined last Q to bring this system of action to life. First, elevate the workplace with AI. Second, drive growth of new AI products. Third, scale AI-first customer experience. Let me start by speaking about scaling AI-first customer experience. Zoom's advantage in customer experience comes from embedding it within our broader system of action, not treating it as a standalone solution, as many competitors do. Our CX platform is differentiated because it is built on the same platform that powers collaboration inside the organization and extends seamlessly to customer engagement and other external workflows. By unifying internal and external workflows, we eliminate traditional silos and enable customer journeys to move continuously from conversation to completion.

Eric Yuan: This directly connects to the 3 priorities we outlined last Q to bring this system of action to life. First, elevate the workplace with AI. Second, drive growth of new AI products. Third, scale AI-first customer experience. Let me start by speaking about scaling AI-first customer experience. Zoom's advantage in customer experience comes from embedding it within our broader system of action, not treating it as a standalone solution, as many competitors do. Our CX platform is differentiated because it is built on the same platform that powers collaboration inside the organization and extends seamlessly to customer engagement and other external workflows. By unifying internal and external workflows, we eliminate traditional silos and enable customer journeys to move continuously from conversation to completion.

Speaker #4: Second, drive growth of new AI products. And third, scale AI-first customer experience. Let me start by speaking about scaling AI-first customer experience. Zoom's advantage in customer experience comes from embedding it within our broader system of action, not treating it as a standalone solution as many competitors do.

Speaker #4: Our CX platform is differentiated because it is built on the same platform that powers collaboration inside the organization and extends seamlessly to customer engagement and other external workflows.

Speaker #4: By unifying internal and external workflows, we eliminate traditional silos and enable customer journeys to move continuously from conversation to completion. Within customer experience itself, Zoom delivers a cohesive set of intelligent capabilities that empower both human and virtual agents and turn live interactions into coordinated action across teams and systems to drive outcomes.

Eric Yuan: Within customer experience itself, Zoom delivers a cohesive set of intelligent capabilities that empower both human and virtual agents and turn live interactions into coordinated action across teams and systems to drive outcomes. Our AI innovation across AI-assisted human agents and virtual agents is translating into improved service outcomes and cost savings for our customers, and incremental revenue for Zoom. You see this in ZCX ARR continuing to grow in high double digits, and in fact, accelerating in Q4, driven by AI monetization. More concretely, you see it in the story our deal composition tells about why customers choose us. Every one of our top 10 deals this quarter included paid AI, and seven represented competitive displacements of leading CCaaS vendors. Let me bring this to life with some Q4 customer wins.

Eric Yuan: Within customer experience itself, Zoom delivers a cohesive set of intelligent capabilities that empower both human and virtual agents and turn live interactions into coordinated action across teams and systems to drive outcomes. Our AI innovation across AI-assisted human agents and virtual agents is translating into improved service outcomes and cost savings for our customers, and incremental revenue for Zoom. You see this in ZCX ARR continuing to grow in high double digits, and in fact, accelerating in Q4, driven by AI monetization. More concretely, you see it in the story our deal composition tells about why customers choose us. Every one of our top 10 deals this quarter included paid AI, and seven represented competitive displacements of leading CCaaS vendors. Let me bring this to life with some Q4 customer wins.

Speaker #4: Our AI innovation across AI-assisted human agents and virtual agents is translating into improved service outcomes and cost savings for our customers and incremental revenue for Zoom.

Speaker #4: You see this in ZCX ARR continuing to grow in high double digits and, in fact, accelerating in Q4 driven by AI monetization. More concretely, you see it in the story our deal composition tells about why customers choose us.

Speaker #4: Every one of our top 10 deals this quarter included paid AI, and 7 represented competitive displacements of leading CCaaS vendors. Let me bring this to life with some Q4 customer wins.

Speaker #4: We welcomed Aeroflow Health, a medical device company who chose Zoom Contact Center in a major Q4 deal spanning ZCC Elite and ZVA Voice Plus Chat to replace a leading CCaaS vendor due to our bold AI vision for CX and ability to execute.

Eric Yuan: We welcomed Aeroflow Health, a medical device company, who chose Zoom Contact Center in a major Q4 deal spanning ZCC Elite and ZVA Voice plus Chat to replace a leading CCaaS vendor due to our bold AI vision for CX and ability to execute. We also saw many expansions. MLB and OPENLANE both began as Zoom Contact Center customers, and in Q4, bought a combination of ZCC Elite and ZVA Voice to deliver reimagined AI-first human plus virtual agent customer service. In other cases, customers are adopting the full Zoom CX suite alongside Zoom Phone and Workplace to transform service operations end to end. For example, in Q4, a major insurance provider decided to replace an expensive contact center stitched to an AI point solution with our unified Zoom Phone, Contact Center, and ZVA Voice to automate call triage, reduce agent workload, and increase overall efficiency.

Eric Yuan: We welcomed Aeroflow Health, a medical device company, who chose Zoom Contact Center in a major Q4 deal spanning ZCC Elite and ZVA Voice plus Chat to replace a leading CCaaS vendor due to our bold AI vision for CX and ability to execute. We also saw many expansions. MLB and OPENLANE both began as Zoom Contact Center customers, and in Q4, bought a combination of ZCC Elite and ZVA Voice to deliver reimagined AI-first human plus virtual agent customer service. In other cases, customers are adopting the full Zoom CX suite alongside Zoom Phone and Workplace to transform service operations end to end. For example, in Q4, a major insurance provider decided to replace an expensive contact center stitched to an AI point solution with our unified Zoom Phone, Contact Center, and ZVA Voice to automate call triage, reduce agent workload, and increase overall efficiency.

Speaker #4: We also saw many expansions. MLB and OpenLane both began as Zoom Contact Center customers, and in Q4 bought a combination of ZCC Elite and ZVA Voice to deliver reimagined AI-first human plus virtual agent customer service.

Speaker #4: In other cases, customers are adopting the full Zoom CX suite alongside Zoomphone and Workplace to transform service operations end to end. For example, in Q4, a major insurance provider decided to replace an expensive contact center stitched to an AI point solution with our unified Zoomphone contact center and ZVA Voice to automate call triage, reduce agent workload, and increase overall efficiency.

Speaker #4: We also partnered with Surrey and Sussex Healthcare NHS Trust, who administers regional NHS services, to modernize their manual fragmented inbound call operations through a single secure digital platform powered by Zoomphone, Zoom Contact Center, and ZVA Voice Plus Chat to enable AI-powered self-service, improve wait times, reduce missed appointments, and enhance overall patient outcomes and call operations efficiency.

Eric Yuan: We also partnered with Surrey and Sussex Healthcare NHS Trust, who administers regional NHS services, to modernize their manual, fragmented inbound call operations through a single, secure digital platform powered by Zoom Phone, Zoom Contact Center, and ZVA Voice plus Chat to enable AI-powered self-service, improve wait times, reduce missed appointments, and enhance overall patient outcomes and call operations efficiency. These wins also demonstrate the momentum behind Zoom Virtual Agent and the customer response to our voice AI within the CX suite. Only a few quarters in market, ZVA Voice has already been included in 4 of our top 10 CX deals. We are also starting to see ZVA Voice bring in new customers and act as a beachhead for potential expansion into large organizations.

Eric Yuan: We also partnered with Surrey and Sussex Healthcare NHS Trust, who administers regional NHS services, to modernize their manual, fragmented inbound call operations through a single, secure digital platform powered by Zoom Phone, Zoom Contact Center, and ZVA Voice plus Chat to enable AI-powered self-service, improve wait times, reduce missed appointments, and enhance overall patient outcomes and call operations efficiency. These wins also demonstrate the momentum behind Zoom Virtual Agent and the customer response to our voice AI within the CX suite. Only a few quarters in market, ZVA Voice has already been included in 4 of our top 10 CX deals. We are also starting to see ZVA Voice bring in new customers and act as a beachhead for potential expansion into large organizations.

Speaker #4: These wins also demonstrate the momentum behind Zoom virtual agent and the customer response to our voice AI within the CX suite. Only a few quarters in market, ZVA Voice has already been included in four of our top 10 CX deals.

Speaker #4: We are also starting to see ZVA Voice bring in new customers and act as a beachhead for potential expansion into large organizations. In Q4, we signed a nearly seven-figure ARR deal with a leading U.S. retailer leveraging ZVA to handle inbound calls across more than 1,100 locations.

Eric Yuan: In Q4, we signed a nearly seven-figure ARR deal with a leading US retailer, leveraging ZVA to handle inbound calls across more than 1,100 locations. ZVA 3.0, announced yesterday, builds upon this growing momentum. It operates across voice and chat, taking action across systems, executing complex multi-step workflows, learning continuously from how human agents resolve issues, and seamlessly bringing people into the conversation with full context when needed. That's how we are helping enterprises close the loop on customer issues at scale, and it's a powerful example of how our CX platform can drive measurable efficiency, better experiences, and real business value for our customers. Our second priority is to grow AI revenue streams beyond customer experience and to extend the system of action to new AI products across vertical and horizontal workflows.

Eric Yuan: In Q4, we signed a nearly seven-figure ARR deal with a leading US retailer, leveraging ZVA to handle inbound calls across more than 1,100 locations. ZVA 3.0, announced yesterday, builds upon this growing momentum. It operates across voice and chat, taking action across systems, executing complex multi-step workflows, learning continuously from how human agents resolve issues, and seamlessly bringing people into the conversation with full context when needed. That's how we are helping enterprises close the loop on customer issues at scale, and it's a powerful example of how our CX platform can drive measurable efficiency, better experiences, and real business value for our customers. Our second priority is to grow AI revenue streams beyond customer experience and to extend the system of action to new AI products across vertical and horizontal workflows.

Speaker #4: ZVA 3.0, announced yesterday, builds upon this growing, momentum it operates across voice and chat, taking action across systems, executing complex multi-step workflows, learning continuously from how human agents resolve issues, and seamlessly bringing people into the conversation with full context when needed.

Speaker #4: That's how we are helping enterprises close the loop on customer issues at scale, and it's a powerful example of how our CX platform can drive measurable efficiency, better experiences, and real business value for our customers.

Speaker #4: Our second priority is to grow AI revenue streams beyond customer experience and to extend the system of action to new AI products across vertical and horizontal workflows.

Speaker #4: Zoom revenue accelerator, our revenue orchestration platform that uses the power of Zoom AI to drive prospecting, coaching, CRM automation, and more, is a great example of this vertical value.

Eric Yuan: Zoom Revenue Accelerator, our revenue orchestration platform that uses the power of Zoom AI to drive prospecting, coaching, CRM automation, and more, is a great example of this vertical value. ZRA had a strong quarter. The number of customers purchasing it grew 50% year-over-year, and its largest Q4 transaction spanned HR services, real estate, technology, and automotive sectors. Another great example of vertical workflows is BrightHire, which we were very excited to close in Q4 and bring similar conversational AI value to recruiting and hiring. BrightHire is early in its growth path. Together, we have a tremendous opportunity to combine BrightHire's domain-specific AI capabilities with Zoom's product breadth and distribution advantages to transform how organizations recruit, hire, and retain talent. We are also making progress with Custom AI Companion, which brings horizontal value to workflows across Zoom Workplace and beyond....

Eric Yuan: Zoom Revenue Accelerator, our revenue orchestration platform that uses the power of Zoom AI to drive prospecting, coaching, CRM automation, and more, is a great example of this vertical value. ZRA had a strong quarter. The number of customers purchasing it grew 50% year-over-year, and its largest Q4 transaction spanned HR services, real estate, technology, and automotive sectors. Another great example of vertical workflows is BrightHire, which we were very excited to close in Q4 and bring similar conversational AI value to recruiting and hiring. BrightHire is early in its growth path. Together, we have a tremendous opportunity to combine BrightHire's domain-specific AI capabilities with Zoom's product breadth and distribution advantages to transform how organizations recruit, hire, and retain talent. We are also making progress with Custom AI Companion, which brings horizontal value to workflows across Zoom Workplace and beyond....

Speaker #4: ZRA had a strong quarter. The number of customers purchasing it grew 50% year over year, and its largest Q4 transaction spanned HR services, real estate, technology, and automotive sectors.

Speaker #4: Another great example of vertical workflows is BrightHire, which we were very excited to close in Q4 and bring similar conversational AI value to recruiting and hiring.

Speaker #4: BrightHire is early in its growth path. Together, we have a tremendous opportunity to combine BrightHire's domain-specific AI capabilities with Zoom's product breadth and distribution advantages to transform how organizations recruit, hire, and retain talent.

Speaker #4: We are also making progress with custom AI companion, which brings horizontal value to workflows across Zoom Workplace and beyond. We're proud to welcome the following new customers, showing the breadth of what this product can unlock.

Eric Yuan: We're proud to welcome the following new customers, showing the breadth of what this product can unlock. Harmonic, a leader in virtualized broadband and video streaming solutions, added Custom AI Companion wall-to-wall to their Workplace deployment to integrate across multiple third-party tools and support knowledge retention, sales enablement, and employee onboarding. Custom AI Companion also made headway in sectors like education, where AI literacy is of paramount importance for both students and administrators. In Q4, Grand Valley State University adopted it wall-to-wall alongside Zoom Workplace for Education, supporting their efforts to streamline help desk and other student-facing processes by connecting administrators and community members more seamlessly with internal knowledge bases and workflows. At the same time, they added ZVA to their existing Zoom Contact Center to provide students with more responsive omnichannel support.

Eric Yuan: We're proud to welcome the following new customers, showing the breadth of what this product can unlock. Harmonic, a leader in virtualized broadband and video streaming solutions, added Custom AI Companion wall-to-wall to their Workplace deployment to integrate across multiple third-party tools and support knowledge retention, sales enablement, and employee onboarding. Custom AI Companion also made headway in sectors like education, where AI literacy is of paramount importance for both students and administrators. In Q4, Grand Valley State University adopted it wall-to-wall alongside Zoom Workplace for Education, supporting their efforts to streamline help desk and other student-facing processes by connecting administrators and community members more seamlessly with internal knowledge bases and workflows. At the same time, they added ZVA to their existing Zoom Contact Center to provide students with more responsive omnichannel support.

Speaker #4: Harmonic, a leader in virtualized broadband and video streaming solutions, added custom AI Companion wall-to-wall to their Workplace deployment to integrate across multiple third-party tools and support knowledge retention, sales enablement, and employee onboarding.

Speaker #4: Custom AI companion also made headway in sectors like education, where AI literacy is of paramount importance for both students and administrators. In Q4, Grand Valley State University, adopted it wall-to-wall alongside Zoom Workplace for education, supporting their efforts to streamline help desk and other student-facing processes by connecting administrators and community members more seamlessly with internal knowledge bases and workflows.

Speaker #4: At the same time, they added ZVA to their existing Zoom Contact Center to provide students with more responsive, omnichannel support. Last, the foundation of our system of action sits within Zoom Workplace, spanning the full meetings and work lifecycle, where context is created and work moves forward.

Eric Yuan: Last, the foundation of our system of action sits within Zoom Workplace, spanning the full meetings and work life cycle, where context is created and work moves forward. By evolving collaboration into an engine of action while preserving the flexibility of an open ecosystem, Zoom Workplace remains simple, reliable, and deeply preferred by solopreneurs and Fortune 10 companies alike. Q4 marked a big step forward with the launch of AI Companion 3.0, advancing our system of action by turning meetings from one-off events into engines of ongoing work. As innovation accelerates, adoption continues to grow and broaden. In Q4, AI Companion monthly active users more than tripled year-over-year. MAUs engaging AI through the side panel more than doubled quarter-over-quarter, and within Zoom Phone, MAUs using AI features increased 35% sequentially. This momentum reflects not only scale, but expanding depth of engagement across workflows.

Eric Yuan: Last, the foundation of our system of action sits within Zoom Workplace, spanning the full meetings and work life cycle, where context is created and work moves forward. By evolving collaboration into an engine of action while preserving the flexibility of an open ecosystem, Zoom Workplace remains simple, reliable, and deeply preferred by solopreneurs and Fortune 10 companies alike. Q4 marked a big step forward with the launch of AI Companion 3.0, advancing our system of action by turning meetings from one-off events into engines of ongoing work. As innovation accelerates, adoption continues to grow and broaden. In Q4, AI Companion monthly active users more than tripled year-over-year. MAUs engaging AI through the side panel more than doubled quarter-over-quarter, and within Zoom Phone, MAUs using AI features increased 35% sequentially. This momentum reflects not only scale, but expanding depth of engagement across workflows.

Speaker #4: By evolving collaboration into an engine of action, while preserving the flexibility of an open ecosystem, Zoom Workplace remains simple, reliable, and deeply preferred by solopreneurs and Fortune 10 companies alike.

Speaker #4: Q4 marked a big step forward with the launch of AI companion 3.0, advancing our system of action by turning meetings from one-off events into engines of ongoing work.

Speaker #4: As innovation accelerates, adoption continues to grow and broaden. In Q4, AI companion monthly active users more than tripled year over year. MAUs engaging AI through the side panel more than doubled quarter over quarter.

Speaker #4: And within Zoomphone, MAUs using AI features increased 35% sequentially. This momentum reflects not only scale but expanding depth of engagement across workflows. We also revitalized our core Zoom Workplace client, simplifying the user experience with refreshed interfaces and streamlined navigation to make action even more intuitive.

Eric Yuan: We also revitalized our core Zoom Workplace client, simplifying the user experience with refreshed interfaces and streamlined navigation to make action even more intuitive. Our product mastery continues to translate into competitive wins and meaningful displacements across meetings, phone, chat, and beyond. Zoom Phone had some great competitive wins, and phone ARR continues to grow in the mid-teens. Let me highlight some customer wins to bring this to life. In Q4, we landed a Fortune 10 customer on Zoom Phone in a large and competitive deal for 140,000 seats, replacing Cisco Calling. We also secured two major US financial institutions on Zoom, Workplace, and Phone, displacing teams and Cisco Calling. Additionally, we significantly expanded our footprint with a leading global bank, adding nearly 50,000 Zoom Phone seats in Q4 and bringing their total deployment to an incredible 150,000 seats.

Eric Yuan: We also revitalized our core Zoom Workplace client, simplifying the user experience with refreshed interfaces and streamlined navigation to make action even more intuitive. Our product mastery continues to translate into competitive wins and meaningful displacements across meetings, phone, chat, and beyond. Zoom Phone had some great competitive wins, and phone ARR continues to grow in the mid-teens. Let me highlight some customer wins to bring this to life. In Q4, we landed a Fortune 10 customer on Zoom Phone in a large and competitive deal for 140,000 seats, replacing Cisco Calling. We also secured two major US financial institutions on Zoom, Workplace, and Phone, displacing teams and Cisco Calling. Additionally, we significantly expanded our footprint with a leading global bank, adding nearly 50,000 Zoom Phone seats in Q4 and bringing their total deployment to an incredible 150,000 seats.

Speaker #4: Our product mastery continues to translate into competitive wins and meaningful displacements across meetings, phone, chat, and beyond. Zoomphone had some great competitive wins, and Phone ARR continues to grow in the mid-teens.

Speaker #4: Let me highlight some customer wins to bring this to life. In Q4, we landed a Fortune 10 customer on Zoom Phone in a large and competitive deal for 140,000 seats, replacing Cisco Calling.

Speaker #4: We also secured two major US financial institutions on Zoom Workplace and Phone displacing teams and Cisco Calling. Additionally, we significantly expanded our footprint with a leading global bank, adding nearly 50,000 Zoomphone seats in Q4 and bringing their total deployment to an incredible 150,000 seats.

Speaker #4: These financial sector wins highlight our ability to meet the complex, highly regulated needs of the industry. Our customer-centric approach to innovation, particularly around AI and security, enables institutions to ensure compliance, mitigate regulatory risk, and modernize operations.

Eric Yuan: These financial sector wins highlight our ability to meet the complex, highly regulated needs of the industry. Our customer-centric approach to innovation, particularly around AI and security, enables institutions to ensure compliance, mitigate regulatory risk, and modernize operations. The momentum is similar in healthcare, where we witnessed a growing number of workplace and phone wins that also added customer experience. They are choosing Zoom not only for sector-specific capabilities, but for the differentiation offered by our cohesive AI-first system of action, spanning patient engagement, care coordination, and back-office collaboration. In the age of AI, Zoom becomes more essential. We are building the system of action that turns conversations into coordinated execution across work inside the organization and with the world outside, including customer engagement, sales, recruiting, and more. By connecting collaboration to action, Zoom drives measurable outcomes, and we're still early in what this system can unlock.

Eric Yuan: These financial sector wins highlight our ability to meet the complex, highly regulated needs of the industry. Our customer-centric approach to innovation, particularly around AI and security, enables institutions to ensure compliance, mitigate regulatory risk, and modernize operations. The momentum is similar in healthcare, where we witnessed a growing number of workplace and phone wins that also added customer experience. They are choosing Zoom not only for sector-specific capabilities, but for the differentiation offered by our cohesive AI-first system of action, spanning patient engagement, care coordination, and back-office collaboration. In the age of AI, Zoom becomes more essential. We are building the system of action that turns conversations into coordinated execution across work inside the organization and with the world outside, including customer engagement, sales, recruiting, and more. By connecting collaboration to action, Zoom drives measurable outcomes, and we're still early in what this system can unlock.

Speaker #4: The momentum is similar in healthcare, where we witnessed a growing number of workplace and phone wins that also added customer experience. They are choosing Zoom not only for sector-specific capabilities but for their differentiation offered by our cohesive AI-first system of action, spanning patient engagement, care coordination, and back-office collaboration.

Speaker #4: In the age of AI, Zoom becomes more essential. We are building the system of action that turns conversations into coordinated execution across work inside the organization, and with the world outside, including customer engagement, sales, recruiting, and more.

Speaker #4: By connecting collaboration to action, Zoom drives measurable outcomes. And we're still early in what this system can unlock. Now, let me turn it over to Michelle to take us through the financials.

Eric Yuan: Now, let me turn it over to Michelle to take us through the financials. Michelle?

Eric Yuan: Now, let me turn it over to Michelle to take us through the financials. Michelle?

Speaker #4: Michelle?

Speaker #2: Thank you, Eric, and hello, everyone. I'm excited to be with you today. To share Zoom's Q4 and full FY26 financial performance. In Q4, total revenue grew 5.3% year over year, to $1.25 billion.

Michelle Chang: Thank you, Eric, and hello, everyone. I'm excited to be with you today to share Zoom's Q4 and full FY 2026 financial performance. In Q4, total revenue grew 5.3% year-over-year to $1.25 billion, or 4.8% in constant currency. This result was $12 million above the high end of our guidance. Our enterprise business continues to be strong, with revenue growing 7.1% year-over-year, representing 61% of our total revenue, up 1 point year-over-year. Our online business continues to show signs of stabilizing. In Q4, average monthly churn was 2.9%, as compared to 2.8% in Q4 of FY 2025.

Michelle Chang: Thank you, Eric, and hello, everyone. I'm excited to be with you today to share Zoom's Q4 and full FY 2026 financial performance. In Q4, total revenue grew 5.3% year-over-year to $1.25 billion, or 4.8% in constant currency. This result was $12 million above the high end of our guidance. Our enterprise business continues to be strong, with revenue growing 7.1% year-over-year, representing 61% of our total revenue, up 1 point year-over-year. Our online business continues to show signs of stabilizing. In Q4, average monthly churn was 2.9%, as compared to 2.8% in Q4 of FY 2025.

Speaker #2: Or $4.8% in constant currency. This result was $12 million above the high end of our guidance. Our enterprise business continues to be strong, with revenue growing 7.1% year over year, representing 61% of our total revenue, up 1 point year over year.

Speaker #2: And our online business continues to show signs of stabilizing. In Q4, average monthly churn was 2.9%, as compared to 2.8% in Q4 of FY25.

Speaker #2: In our enterprise business, we saw a 9% year-over-year growth in the number of customers contributing more than $100,000 in trailing 12-month revenue. These customers now make up 33% of our total revenue, up 2 points year over year.

Michelle Chang: In our enterprise business, we saw 9% year-over-year growth in the number of customers contributing more than $100,000 in trailing 12-month revenue. These customers now make up 33% of our total revenue, up 2 points year-over-year. Our trailing 12-month net dollar expansion rate for enterprise customers in Q4 continues to hold steady at 98%. Pivoting to our growth internationally, our Americas revenue grew 6% year-over-year, EMEA grew 5%, and APAC grew 3%. Moving to our non-GAAP results, which, as a reminder, exclude stock-based compensation expense and associated payroll taxes, net litigation settlements, acquisition-related expenses, impairments of assets, charitable donations of common stock, tax benefits from discrete activities, net gains on strategic investments, and all associated tax effects.

Michelle Chang: In our enterprise business, we saw 9% year-over-year growth in the number of customers contributing more than $100,000 in trailing 12-month revenue. These customers now make up 33% of our total revenue, up 2 points year-over-year. Our trailing 12-month net dollar expansion rate for enterprise customers in Q4 continues to hold steady at 98%. Pivoting to our growth internationally, our Americas revenue grew 6% year-over-year, EMEA grew 5%, and APAC grew 3%. Moving to our non-GAAP results, which, as a reminder, exclude stock-based compensation expense and associated payroll taxes, net litigation settlements, acquisition-related expenses, impairments of assets, charitable donations of common stock, tax benefits from discrete activities, net gains on strategic investments, and all associated tax effects.

Speaker #2: Our trailing 12-month net dollar expansion rate for enterprise customers in Q4 continues to hold steady at 98%. Pivoting to our growth internationally, our Americas revenue grew 6% year over year, EMEA grew 5%, and APAC grew 3%.

Speaker #2: Moving to our non-GAAP results, which, as a reminder, exclude stock-based compensation expense and associated payroll taxes, net litigation settlements, acquisition-related expenses, impairments of assets, charitable donations of common stock, tax benefits from discrete activities, net gains on strategic investments, and all associated tax effects.

Speaker #2: Non-GAAP gross margin in Q4 was 79.8%, up 1 point from Q4 of last year. Primarily due to continued cost optimization efforts, while we remain focused on investing in AI.

Michelle Chang: Non-GAAP gross margin in Q4 was 79.8%, up 1 point from Q4 of last year, primarily due to continued cost optimization efforts while we remain focused on investing in AI. Non-GAAP income from operations grew 4.6% year-over-year to $490 million, exceeding the high end of our guidance by $8 million. Non-GAAP operating margin for Q4 was 39.3%, as compared to 39.5% in the prior year period. The slight margin decline was due to changes in our bonus structure and investments in AI. Non-GAAP diluted net income per share in Q4 increased by $0.03 year-over-year to $1.44 on approximately 303 million non-GAAP diluted weighted average shares outstanding.

Michelle Chang: Non-GAAP gross margin in Q4 was 79.8%, up 1 point from Q4 of last year, primarily due to continued cost optimization efforts while we remain focused on investing in AI. Non-GAAP income from operations grew 4.6% year-over-year to $490 million, exceeding the high end of our guidance by $8 million. Non-GAAP operating margin for Q4 was 39.3%, as compared to 39.5% in the prior year period. The slight margin decline was due to changes in our bonus structure and investments in AI. Non-GAAP diluted net income per share in Q4 increased by $0.03 year-over-year to $1.44 on approximately 303 million non-GAAP diluted weighted average shares outstanding.

Speaker #2: Non-GAAP income from operations grew 4.6% year over year to $490 million, exceeding the high end of our guidance by $8 million. Non-GAAP operating margin for Q4 was 39.3%, as compared to 39.5%.

Speaker #2: In the prior-year period, the slight margin decline was due to changes in our bonus structure and investments in AI. Non-GAAP diluted net income per share in Q4 increased by $0.03 year over year, to $1.44, on approximately 303 million non-GAAP diluted weighted average shares outstanding.

Speaker #2: This result included a headwind of approximately $0.11, from higher-than-expected taxes due in part to tax trips, discrete to the quarter. Turning to the balance sheet.

Michelle Chang: This result included a headwind of approximately $0.11 from higher than expected taxes, due in part to tax true-ups discrete to the quarter. Turning to the balance sheet. Deferred revenue at the end of Q4 grew 5% year-over-year to $1.42 billion, above the high end of our previously provided range. For Q1, we expect deferred revenue to be up 1% to 2% year-over-year, which takes into account the recent trend of larger and longer duration competitive takeouts in phone and contact center that often include credits to defray transition costs. Looking at both our billed and unbilled contracts, our RPO increased over 10% year-over-year to approximately $4.2 billion. We expect to recognize 57% of the total RPO as revenue over the next 12 months, down 2 points year-over-year.

Michelle Chang: This result included a headwind of approximately $0.11 from higher than expected taxes, due in part to tax true-ups discrete to the quarter. Turning to the balance sheet. Deferred revenue at the end of Q4 grew 5% year-over-year to $1.42 billion, above the high end of our previously provided range. For Q1, we expect deferred revenue to be up 1% to 2% year-over-year, which takes into account the recent trend of larger and longer duration competitive takeouts in phone and contact center that often include credits to defray transition costs. Looking at both our billed and unbilled contracts, our RPO increased over 10% year-over-year to approximately $4.2 billion. We expect to recognize 57% of the total RPO as revenue over the next 12 months, down 2 points year-over-year.

Speaker #2: Deferred revenue at the end of Q4 grew 5% year over year, to $1.42 billion, above the high end of our previously provided range. For Q1, we expect deferred revenue to be up 1 to 2 percent year over year, which takes into account the recent trend of larger and longer duration competitive takeouts in phone and contact center that often include credits to deferred transition costs.

Speaker #2: Looking at both our build and unbuild contracts, our RPO increased over 10% year over year, to approximately $4.2 billion. We expect to recognize 57% of the total RPO as revenue over the next 12 months, down 2 points year over year.

Speaker #2: In Q4, we had operating cash flow of $355 million as compared to $425 million in the prior year period. Free cash flow was $338 million, as compared to $416 million in the prior year period.

Michelle Chang: In Q4, we had operating cash flow of $355 million, as compared to $425 million in the prior year period. Free cash flow was $338 million, as compared to $416 million in the prior year period. Our Q4 operating cash flow and free cash flow margins were 28.4% and 27.1%, respectively. We ended the quarter with $7.8 billion in cash equivalents, and marketable securities, excluding restricted cash. Under the current $3.7 billion share buyback plan, in Q4, we repurchased 3.8 million shares for approximately $324 million. That brought our total repurchased under the plan to 36.3 million shares for $2.7 billion at the end of Q4.

Michelle Chang: In Q4, we had operating cash flow of $355 million, as compared to $425 million in the prior year period. Free cash flow was $338 million, as compared to $416 million in the prior year period. Our Q4 operating cash flow and free cash flow margins were 28.4% and 27.1%, respectively. We ended the quarter with $7.8 billion in cash equivalents, and marketable securities, excluding restricted cash. Under the current $3.7 billion share buyback plan, in Q4, we repurchased 3.8 million shares for approximately $324 million. That brought our total repurchased under the plan to 36.3 million shares for $2.7 billion at the end of Q4.

Speaker #2: Our Q4 operating cash flow and free cash flow margins were 28.4% and 27.1%, respectively. We ended the quarter with 7.8 billion in cash, cash equivalents, and marketable securities, excluding restricted cash.

Speaker #2: Under the current 3.7 billion share buyback plan, in Q4, we repurchased 3.8 million shares for approximately $324 million. That brought our total repurchased under the plan to 36.3 million shares for 2.7 billion at the end of Q4.

Speaker #2: Looking into FY27 and beyond, we intend to leverage buybacks to, at a minimum, offset dilution on a yearly basis. Reflecting management's confidence and long-term commitment to shareholder value creation.

Michelle Chang: Looking into FY 2027 and beyond, we intend to leverage buybacks to, at a minimum, offset dilution on a yearly basis, reflecting management's confidence and long-term commitment to shareholder value creation. Pivoting from Q4, I'd like to highlight some of the major financial milestones for the full FY 2026. Total revenue for FY 2026 grew 4.4%, and our enterprise revenue grew 6.5%, both accelerating 130 basis points year-over-year. Along with the top-line progress, we also improved margins. We reached a non-GAAP gross margin of 79.7%, up 80 basis points from the prior year, and a non-GAAP operating margin of 40.4%, up 100 basis points from the prior year. Free cash flow grew 6.4% to $1.9 billion.

Michelle Chang: Looking into FY 2027 and beyond, we intend to leverage buybacks to, at a minimum, offset dilution on a yearly basis, reflecting management's confidence and long-term commitment to shareholder value creation. Pivoting from Q4, I'd like to highlight some of the major financial milestones for the full FY 2026. Total revenue for FY 2026 grew 4.4%, and our enterprise revenue grew 6.5%, both accelerating 130 basis points year-over-year. Along with the top-line progress, we also improved margins. We reached a non-GAAP gross margin of 79.7%, up 80 basis points from the prior year, and a non-GAAP operating margin of 40.4%, up 100 basis points from the prior year. Free cash flow grew 6.4% to $1.9 billion.

Speaker #2: Pivoting from Q4, I'd like to highlight some of the major financial milestones for the full FY26. Total revenue for FY26 grew 4.4%, and our enterprise revenue grew 6.5%.

Speaker #2: Both accelerating 130 basis points year over year. Along with the top-line progress, we also improved margins. We reached a non-GAAP gross margin of 79.7%, up 80 basis points from the prior year.

Speaker #2: And a non-GAAP operating margin of 40.4%, up 100 basis points from the prior year. Free cash flow grew 6.4% to 1.9 billion dollars. And finally, we continue to be strong stewards of shareholder capital.

Michelle Chang: Finally, we continue to be strong stewards of shareholder capital. We reduced stock-based compensation expense by 18% in FY 2026. That, combined with the continued execution of our buyback, allowed us to reduce our diluted weighted average shares outstanding by 2.5%. Turning to guidance. In Q1, we expect revenue to be in the range of $1.22 to $1.225 billion. This represents 4.1% year-over-year growth at the midpoint. We expect non-GAAP operating income to be in the range of $487 to $492 million, representing an operating margin of 40% at the midpoint. Our outlook for non-GAAP earnings per share is $1.40 to $1.42, based on approximately 304 million shares outstanding.

Michelle Chang: Finally, we continue to be strong stewards of shareholder capital. We reduced stock-based compensation expense by 18% in FY 2026. That, combined with the continued execution of our buyback, allowed us to reduce our diluted weighted average shares outstanding by 2.5%. Turning to guidance. In Q1, we expect revenue to be in the range of $1.22 to $1.225 billion. This represents 4.1% year-over-year growth at the midpoint. We expect non-GAAP operating income to be in the range of $487 to $492 million, representing an operating margin of 40% at the midpoint. Our outlook for non-GAAP earnings per share is $1.40 to $1.42, based on approximately 304 million shares outstanding.

Speaker #2: We reduced stock-based compensation expense by 18% in FY26. That combined with the continued execution of our buyback allowed us to reduce our diluted weighted average shares outstanding by 2.5%.

Speaker #2: Turning to guidance, in Q1, we expect revenue to be in the range of $1.22 billion to $1.225 billion. This represents 4.1% year-over-year growth at the midpoint.

Speaker #2: We expect non-GAAP operating income to be in the range of $487 million to $492 million, representing an operating margin of 40% at the midpoint. Our outlook for non-GAAP earnings per share is $1.40 to $1.42.

Speaker #2: Based on approximately 304 million shares outstanding. For FY27, we expect revenue to cross the $5 billion milestone and land in the range of $5.065 to $5.075 billion.

Michelle Chang: For FY 2027, we expect revenue to cross the $5 billion milestone and land in the range of $5.065 to $5.075 billion, which at the midpoint represents 4.1% year-over-year growth. We expect our non-GAAP operating income to be in the range of $2.05 to $2.06 billion, representing an operating margin of 40.5% at the midpoint. This margin guidance includes a temporal tailwind of 180 basis points related to an accounting amortization change, offset by 70 basis points of pressure from the second year of our shift from SBC to cash bonus compensation.

Michelle Chang: For FY 2027, we expect revenue to cross the $5 billion milestone and land in the range of $5.065 to $5.075 billion, which at the midpoint represents 4.1% year-over-year growth. We expect our non-GAAP operating income to be in the range of $2.05 to $2.06 billion, representing an operating margin of 40.5% at the midpoint. This margin guidance includes a temporal tailwind of 180 basis points related to an accounting amortization change, offset by 70 basis points of pressure from the second year of our shift from SBC to cash bonus compensation.

Speaker #2: Which, at the midpoint, represents 4.1% year-over-year growth. We expect our non-GAAP operating income to be in the range of $2.05 to $2.06 billion.

Speaker #2: Representing an operating margin of 40.5% at the midpoint. This margin guidance includes a temporal tailwind of 180 basis points related to an accounting amortization change.

Speaker #2: Offset by 70 basis points of pressure from the second year of our shift from SBC to cash bonus compensation. In addition, our outlook for non-GAAP earnings per share in FY27 is $5.77 to $5.81, based on approximately 308 million shares outstanding.

Michelle Chang: In addition, our outlook for non-GAAP earnings per share in FY 2027 is $5.77 to $5.81, based on approximately 308 million shares outstanding. Included in this guidance is an interest income headwind of approximately $50 million in FY 2027 due to lower yields in the declining rate environment. As a reminder, future share repurchases are not reflected in the share count and our EPS guidance. For FY 2027, we expect free cash flow to be in the range of $1.7 to 1.74 billion, which includes approximately $75 million of incremental CapEx related to the post-pandemic refreshment cycle of assets across our US data centers, as well as similar interest income headwinds previously mentioned.

Michelle Chang: In addition, our outlook for non-GAAP earnings per share in FY 2027 is $5.77 to $5.81, based on approximately 308 million shares outstanding. Included in this guidance is an interest income headwind of approximately $50 million in FY 2027 due to lower yields in the declining rate environment. As a reminder, future share repurchases are not reflected in the share count and our EPS guidance. For FY 2027, we expect free cash flow to be in the range of $1.7 to 1.74 billion, which includes approximately $75 million of incremental CapEx related to the post-pandemic refreshment cycle of assets across our US data centers, as well as similar interest income headwinds previously mentioned.

Speaker #2: Included in this guidance is an interest income headwind of approximately 50 million in FY27 due to lower yields and a declining rate environment. As a reminder, future share repurchases are not reflected in the share count, and our EPS guidance.

Speaker #2: For FY27, we expect free cash flow to be in the range of 1.7 to 1.74 billion dollars. Which includes approximately 75 million dollars of incremental capex related to the post-pandemic refreshment cycle of assets across our US data centers as well as similar interest income headwinds previously mentioned.

Speaker #2: As we end FY26 and we move into FY27, we're thrilled with our progress. And we're excited about our differentiated vision as an AI-first system of action.

Michelle Chang: As we end FY 2026 and we move into FY 2027, we're thrilled with our progress, and we're excited about our differentiated vision as an AI-first system of action. This success gives us confidence in our ability to grow durably beyond $5 billion in revenue across progress in meetings, continued growth in phone, scaling our AI-first customer experience, and in introducing new AI revenue streams. We're excited to do all of this and still maintain our focus on profitability, cash flow generation, and shareholder returns. Thank you to our customers, investors, and of course, the entire Zoom team, for your trust and your support. With that, Catherine, please queue up the first question.

Michelle Chang: As we end FY 2026 and we move into FY 2027, we're thrilled with our progress, and we're excited about our differentiated vision as an AI-first system of action. This success gives us confidence in our ability to grow durably beyond $5 billion in revenue across progress in meetings, continued growth in phone, scaling our AI-first customer experience, and in introducing new AI revenue streams. We're excited to do all of this and still maintain our focus on profitability, cash flow generation, and shareholder returns. Thank you to our customers, investors, and of course, the entire Zoom team, for your trust and your support. With that, Catherine, please queue up the first question.

Speaker #2: The success gives us confidence in our ability to grow durably beyond $5 billion in revenue across progress in meetings, continued growth in phone, scaling our AI-first customer experience, and in introducing new AI revenue streams.

Speaker #2: We're excited to do all of this and still maintain our focus on profitability, cash flow generation, and shareholder returns. Thank you to our customers, investors, and of course, the entire Zoom team, for your trust and your support.

Speaker #2: With that, Catherine, please cue up the first question.

Speaker #1: Thank you, Michelle. We'll now begin the Q&A portion of the call. When I read your name, please turn on your video and unmute. As a reminder, in an effort to hear from everyone, please limit yourself to one question.

Operator: Thank you, Michelle. We'll now begin the Q&A portion of the call. When I read your name, please turn on your video and unmute. As a reminder, in an effort to hear from everyone, please limit yourself to one question. Our first question will come from Arjun Bhatia with William Blair.

Operator: Thank you, Michelle. We'll now begin the Q&A portion of the call. When I read your name, please turn on your video and unmute. As a reminder, in an effort to hear from everyone, please limit yourself to one question. Our first question will come from Arjun Bhatia with William Blair.

Speaker #1: Our first question will come from Arjun Bhatia with William Blair.

Speaker #3: Perfect. Thank you so much. Eric, maybe one for you. We'll start. I'm just curious, how you think about AI monetization progress in fiscal 2027?

Arjun Bhatia: Perfect. Thank you so much. Eric, maybe one for you. We'll start. I'm just curious, how you think about AI and monetization progress in fiscal 2027. You called out a couple examples of, you know, customers adopting Custom AI Companion and going wall to wall. How do you think that and your broader portfolio of sort of, you know, AI products evolves in terms of adoption and contribution to revenue next year?

Arjun Bhatia: Perfect. Thank you so much. Eric, maybe one for you. We'll start. I'm just curious, how you think about AI and monetization progress in fiscal 2027. You called out a couple examples of, you know, customers adopting Custom AI Companion and going wall to wall. How do you think that and your broader portfolio of sort of, you know, AI products evolves in terms of adoption and contribution to revenue next year?

Speaker #3: You called out a couple of examples of customers adopting custom AI companion and going wall-to-wall. How do you think that and your broader portfolio of sort of AI products evolves in terms of adoption and contribution to revenue next year?

Speaker #4: Yeah, it's a great question. So well, we're optimistic about our AI technology monetization in FY27. Driven by, first of all, and customized AI company, more and more in the customer's they see the value and they would like it because AI company all built in for free.

Eric Yuan: Yes, great question. Well, you know, we're optimistic about our AI technology monetization in FY 2027, driven by, first of all, Custom AI Companion. You know, more and more in the customers, they see the value, and they would like it. You know, because AI Companion are built in for free, but Custom AI Companion is different. We can monetize. That's one aspect, right, to drive the AI, you know, monetization. At the same time, we have very solid AI Companion foundation, the team working so hard to innovate. We leverage that technology to empower other use cases like ZVA, Zoom Contact Center, Zoom Phone, and ZRA, almost every, you know, those the product lines, right? For customer experience or sales experience, even for webinar, right?

Eric Yuan: Yes, great question. Well, you know, we're optimistic about our AI technology monetization in FY 2027, driven by, first of all, Custom AI Companion. You know, more and more in the customers, they see the value, and they would like it. You know, because AI Companion are built in for free, but Custom AI Companion is different. We can monetize. That's one aspect, right, to drive the AI, you know, monetization. At the same time, we have very solid AI Companion foundation, the team working so hard to innovate. We leverage that technology to empower other use cases like ZVA, Zoom Contact Center, Zoom Phone, and ZRA, almost every, you know, those the product lines, right? For customer experience or sales experience, even for webinar, right?

Speaker #4: But customer AI company is different. We can monetize. That's an aspect, right, to drive the AI monetization. At the same time, we have very solid AI company suitable foundation and a team working so hard to innovate.

Speaker #4: We leverage that technology to empower other use cases like ZVA, Zoom Connect Center, Zoom Phone, and ZRA, almost every those product lines, right, for customer experience or for sales experience even for webinar, right?

Speaker #4: We can leverage AI to empower those vertical use cases. Also, we can monetize. Again, take the ZCX for example, right? Look at top 10 ZCX deals.

Eric Yuan: We can leverage AI, you know, to empower, you know, those, the vertical use cases. Also, we can, you know, monetize. Again, you know, take the ZCX, for example, right. Look at top 10 ZCX deals we closed in Q4. Four of them already attached with Zoom Virtual Agent, right. Zoom Virtual Agent is built upon our AI technology. We see more and more opportunity like that. I cannot be more excited, you know, than before, right. Because of AI and because of our monetization strategy for AI. Thank you.

Eric Yuan: We can leverage AI, you know, to empower, you know, those, the vertical use cases. Also, we can, you know, monetize. Again, you know, take the ZCX, for example, right. Look at top 10 ZCX deals we closed in Q4. Four of them already attached with Zoom Virtual Agent, right. Zoom Virtual Agent is built upon our AI technology. We see more and more opportunity like that. I cannot be more excited, you know, than before, right. Because of AI and because of our monetization strategy for AI. Thank you.

Speaker #4: We close in Q4. Four of them already attached with Zoom Voice Agent, right? Zoom Voice Agent built upon our AI technology. We see more and more opportunity like that.

Speaker #4: I cannot be more excited than before, right? Because of AI, and because of our monetization strategy for AI. Thank you.

Speaker #1: Our next question comes from Alan Verkovsky from BTIG.

Operator: Our next question comes from Alan Frakowski from BTIG.

Operator: Our next question comes from Alan Frakowski from BTIG.

Speaker #3: Hey, guys. Can you hear me?

Alan Frakowski: Hey, guys, can you hear me?

Allan Verkhovski: Hey, guys, can you hear me?

Speaker #4: Yep.

Michelle Chang: Yep.

Eric Yuan: Yep.

Speaker #3: Awesome. Congrats on the strong quarter here. Great to see the acceleration in Zoom customer experience Michelle, I wanted to ask you and I'll stick to a question here, but on the Q1 deferred revenue growth guidance of one and a half percent at the midpoint, can you just quantify the impact from the larger competitive takeouts and for the fiscal 27 revenue guidance?

Alan Frakowski: Awesome. Congrats on the strong quarter here. Great to see the acceleration in Zoom Customer Experience. Michelle, I wanted to ask you, and I'll stick to a question here, but on the Q1 deferred revenue growth guidance of 1.5% to midpoint, can you just quantify the impact from the larger competitive takeouts? For the fiscal 2027 revenue guidance, can you just give some color, like what you're assuming for enterprise and online revenue growth?

Allan Verkhovski: Awesome. Congrats on the strong quarter here. Great to see the acceleration in Zoom Customer Experience. Michelle, I wanted to ask you, and I'll stick to a question here, but on the Q1 deferred revenue growth guidance of 1.5% to midpoint, can you just quantify the impact from the larger competitive takeouts? For the fiscal 2027 revenue guidance, can you just give some color, like what you're assuming for enterprise and online revenue growth?

Speaker #3: Can you just give some color like what you're assuming for enterprise and online revenue growth?

Speaker #1: Sure. No problem. Let me touch on the deferred revenue one because I think this is one that's really important for investors to understand and maybe not read into it as you traditionally might.

Michelle Chang: Sure, no problem. Let me touch on the deferred revenue one, because I think this is one that's really important for investors to understand and maybe not read into it as you traditionally might. First of all, it's important to note this is a billing dynamic and not sort of a rev rec thing. What we saw was a recent trend that's actually great for Zoom's business of, you know, wins in large and longer competitive platforms, where we're providing a grace period to our customers to help them with that transition. This is good for Zoom. This is intentional. I think maybe just one other piece for investors. You can see that the fruits of that so much in Eric's script, and you can see it in the long-term RPO that's up 15% relative to 3% in Q3.

Michelle Chang: Sure, no problem. Let me touch on the deferred revenue one, because I think this is one that's really important for investors to understand and maybe not read into it as you traditionally might. First of all, it's important to note this is a billing dynamic and not sort of a rev rec thing. What we saw was a recent trend that's actually great for Zoom's business of, you know, wins in large and longer competitive platforms, where we're providing a grace period to our customers to help them with that transition. This is good for Zoom. This is intentional. I think maybe just one other piece for investors. You can see that the fruits of that so much in Eric's script, and you can see it in the long-term RPO that's up 15% relative to 3% in Q3.

Speaker #1: First of all, it's important to note this is a billing dynamic and not sort of a rev rec thing. What we saw was a recent trend that's actually great for Zoom's business of wins in large and longer competitive platforms where we're providing a grace period to our customers to help them with that transition.

Speaker #1: This is good for Zoom. This is intentional. And I think maybe just one other piece for investors: you can see the fruits of that, so much in Eric's script, and you can see it in the long-term RPO that's up 15% relative to 3% in Q3.

Michelle Chang: A couple thoughts on deferred revenue. In terms of the guide, you know, it's 4.1%. One other thing that I want to make sure we call out to investors is included in that guide is the 40 basis headwind of pressure from a single large competitor, white labeling, that churned at the end of FY 2026. Setting that aside, to your broader question, we expect online to have slight growth, sort of in the range of what they had this year. Really, it's going to be enterprise that's the headline for the growth.

Speaker #1: So, a couple of thoughts on deferred revenue. In terms of the guide, it's 4.1%. One other thing that I want to make sure we call out to investors is, included in that guide is the 40 basis point headwind of pressure from a single large competitor, white labeling, that churned at the end of FY26.

Michelle Chang: A couple thoughts on deferred revenue. In terms of the guide, you know, it's 4.1%. One other thing that I want to make sure we call out to investors is included in that guide is the 40 basis headwind of pressure from a single large competitor, white labeling, that churned at the end of FY 2026. Setting that aside, to your broader question, we expect online to have slight growth, sort of in the range of what they had this year. Really, it's going to be enterprise that's the headline for the growth.

Speaker #1: Setting that aside, to your broader question, we expect online to have slight growth sort of in the range of what they had this year.

Speaker #1: And really, it's going to be enterprise that's the headline for the growth. And it's going to be the source of things that we talked about on this earnings and, frankly, we've been talking about with investors, which is progress in AI monetization.

Michelle Chang: It's going to be the sorts of things that we talked about on this earnings, and that, frankly, we've been talking about with investors, which is progress in AI monetization, progress in product diversification, and building out new routes to market, upmarket, and with our channel. Awesome. Congrats on the strong quarter, guys. Thank you.

Michelle Chang: It's going to be the sorts of things that we talked about on this earnings, and that, frankly, we've been talking about with investors, which is progress in AI monetization, progress in product diversification, and building out new routes to market, upmarket, and with our channel.

Speaker #1: Progress in product diversification, and building out new routes to market—upmarket and with our channel.

Speaker #3: Awesome. Congrats on the strong quarter, guys. Thank you.

Allan Verkhovski: Awesome. Congrats on the strong quarter, guys. Thank you.

Speaker #1: Our next question will come from Peter Levine from Evercore.

Operator: Our next question will come from Peter Levine from Evercore.

Operator: Our next question will come from Peter Levine from Evercore.

Speaker #5: Great. Thank you for taking my question. Eric, one for you. I think in a world where AI models or provider, the AI model providers are essentially they're controlling the intelligence layer and theoretically could build AI-native collaboration suites on top of their capabilities.

Peter Levine: Great. Thank you for taking my question. Eric, one for you. I think in a world where, you know, the AI model providers are, you know, essentially, they're controlling the intelligence layer and theoretically could build, you know, AI-native collaboration suites on top of their capabilities. I guess question is like, what, like, in terms of technology or what structural barriers, I think, prevent them from disintermediating Zoom? What's the moat that you feel like will defend your market? Data, the infrastructure, it's the enterprise relationships, brand equity, or is it something deeper? I guess it's like, how do you think about that risk, and then how would you debunk the concerns that, like, AI could ultimately replace you guys?

Peter Levine: Great. Thank you for taking my question. Eric, one for you. I think in a world where, you know, the AI model providers are, you know, essentially, they're controlling the intelligence layer and theoretically could build, you know, AI-native collaboration suites on top of their capabilities. I guess question is like, what, like, in terms of technology or what structural barriers, I think, prevent them from disintermediating Zoom? What's the moat that you feel like will defend your market? Data, the infrastructure, it's the enterprise relationships, brand equity, or is it something deeper? I guess it's like, how do you think about that risk, and then how would you debunk the concerns that, like, AI could ultimately replace you guys?

Speaker #5: So I guess questions like what in terms of technology or what structural barriers I think prevent them from this intermediating Zoom? What's the moat that you feel will defend your market?

Speaker #5: Data, the infrastructure, it's the enterprise relationships, brand equity. But, or is it something deeper? I guess it's like, how do you think about that risk?

Speaker #5: And then, how would you debunk the concerns that AI could ultimately replace you guys?

Speaker #4: Yeah, wonderful question. I think if you think about the mission-critical communication like Zoom, reliability is extremely important, right? It's got to work every time.

Eric Yuan: Yeah, wonderful question. I think if you think about the mission-critical, you know, communication like Zoom, reliability is extremely important, right? It got to work every time. You cannot say, today's meeting may not work, tomorrow might work. No one's going to use that, right? Security also extremely important, right? You need all kind of security features, all in the building, plus ease of use. That's the reason why the customer they choose to use Zoom. You know, back to the AI, I think, yeah, I'm an engineer, right? I also now starting writing code as well with the IO, AI coding tools. I think it's extremely hard to replicate what we built over the past many years. First of all, a lot of our code is still C++ code.

Eric Yuan: Yeah, wonderful question. I think if you think about the mission-critical, you know, communication like Zoom, reliability is extremely important, right? It got to work every time. You cannot say, today's meeting may not work, tomorrow might work. No one's going to use that, right? Security also extremely important, right? You need all kind of security features, all in the building, plus ease of use. That's the reason why the customer they choose to use Zoom. You know, back to the AI, I think, yeah, I'm an engineer, right? I also now starting writing code as well with the IO, AI coding tools. I think it's extremely hard to replicate what we built over the past many years. First of all, a lot of our code is still C++ code.

Speaker #4: You cannot see a today's meeting may not work. Tomorrow might work. No one's going to use that, right? And security also extremely important, right?

Speaker #4: You need all kinds of of security features also in the building. Plus ease of use. That's the reason why the customer they choose to use Zoom.

Speaker #4: Back to the AI, I think yeah, I'm an engineer, right? I also now started writing code as well with the IO coding tools. I think it's extremely hard to replicate what we built all the past many years because first of all, a lot of code is still C++ code.

Eric Yuan: You know, to open up the video, audio, a lot of things, right? Today, look at the AI coding tools. It's so hard, you know, to build a very skittable and, you know, the leverage the native OS, build all kind of code. It's not as straightforward. You can build it very easy, just, you know, high-end tools. It's more like a toy. Since nobody's going to use that because this is collaboration. It's not a system of record or database or, I mean, store information, you know, even UI don't know, work. You know how to use that, right? It's fine. With any company, mission-critical video collaboration tools like Zoom, is really hard to leverage the AI coding tools to replicate whatever chip. I have very high confidence.

Eric Yuan: You know, to open up the video, audio, a lot of things, right? Today, look at the AI coding tools. It's so hard, you know, to build a very skittable and, you know, the leverage the native OS, build all kind of code. It's not as straightforward. You can build it very easy, just, you know, high-end tools. It's more like a toy. Since nobody's going to use that because this is collaboration. It's not a system of record or database or, I mean, store information, you know, even UI don't know, work. You know how to use that, right? It's fine. With any company, mission-critical video collaboration tools like Zoom, is really hard to leverage the AI coding tools to replicate whatever chip. I have very high confidence.

Speaker #4: To open that video, audio, a lot of things, right? Today, look at the AI coding tools. It's so hard to build a very scalable and leverage the native OS, build all kinds of code.

Speaker #4: It's not as straightforward. You can build a very easy system high in the tools, but it's more like a toy. Nobody's going to use that because this is collaboration.

Speaker #4: It's not about system records or databases or information. Even the UI does not work. You know how to use that, right? It's fine. But when it comes to mission-critical video collaboration tools like Zoom, it's really hard to leverage AI coding tools to replicate what we achieved.

Speaker #4: I have very high confidence. And by the way, no matter what we do, we're still in the tools like Zoom, right? Human-to-human connection or interaction is still very important.

Eric Yuan: By the way, no matter what we do, we still need tools like Zoom, right? Human to human connection or interaction is still very important.

Eric Yuan: By the way, no matter what we do, we still need tools like Zoom, right? Human to human connection or interaction is still very important.

Speaker #4: So

Peter Levine: Michelle, follow up on net retention, 98%. You know, can you maybe just help us bridge the gap? You know, all the new products that you're having, you're seeing upsell, contact center voice. You know, when does that inflection, when can we see that in the model? Thank you.

Speaker #5: Michelle, I'll follow up on net retention, 98%. Can you maybe just help us bridge the gap? All the new products that you're having, you're seeing upsell contact center voice.

Peter Levine: Michelle, follow up on net retention, 98%. You know, can you maybe just help us bridge the gap? You know, all the new products that you're having, you're seeing upsell, contact center voice. You know, when does that inflection, when can we see that in the model? Thank you.

Speaker #5: When does that inflection? When can we see that in the model? Thank you.

Speaker #1: Yeah. So great question on the NDE. Look, we've said that it will rebound in the long term. We've not put guidance. And when it rebounds, it's going to be off of so many of the drivers that we're talking about here: progress and churn, phone and mid-teens, contact center and high double digits, and obviously the onset of AI monetization.

Michelle Chang: Yeah, great question on the NBA. Look, we've said that it will rebound in the long term. We've not put guidance, and when it rebounds, it's going to be off of so many of the drivers that we're talking about here. Progress and churn, phone and mid-teens, Contact Center and high double digits, and obviously the onset of AI monetization. Look, we're going to run the business sort of to revenue growth, and you have our 27 guidance there. A couple of notes maybe for investors about headwinds relative to NBA. First of all, I just want to go back to that, you know, white label churn that we talked about, of competitive white label churn. That will obviously put some pressure.

Michelle Chang: Yeah, great question on the NBA. Look, we've said that it will rebound in the long term. We've not put guidance, and when it rebounds, it's going to be off of so many of the drivers that we're talking about here. Progress and churn, phone and mid-teens, Contact Center and high double digits, and obviously the onset of AI monetization. Look, we're going to run the business sort of to revenue growth, and you have our 27 guidance there. A couple of notes maybe for investors about headwinds relative to NBA. First of all, I just want to go back to that, you know, white label churn that we talked about, of competitive white label churn. That will obviously put some pressure.

Speaker #1: Look, we're going to run the business sort of to revenue growth. And you have our '27 guidance there. But a couple of notes, maybe, for investors about headwinds relative to NDE.

Speaker #1: First of all, I just want to go back to that white label churn. That we talked about of competitive white label churn that will obviously put some pressure.

Speaker #1: And then the other thing that I call out for investors is actually good pressure, which is with Workvivo and Contact Center, we're seeing them bring in new customers to Zoom.

Michelle Chang: The other thing that I call out for investors is actually good pressure, which is with Workvivo and Contact Center, we're seeing them bring in new customers to Zoom. Look, in the fullness of time, that will replicate through our net dollar expansion, but obviously, it'll take a little bit more time. Just two more mechanical things to take into consideration.

Michelle Chang: The other thing that I call out for investors is actually good pressure, which is with Workvivo and Contact Center, we're seeing them bring in new customers to Zoom. Look, in the fullness of time, that will replicate through our net dollar expansion, but obviously, it'll take a little bit more time. Just two more mechanical things to take into consideration.

Speaker #1: And look, in the fullness of time, that will replicate through our net dollar expansion. But, obviously, it'll take a little bit more time. So, just two more mechanical things to take into consideration.

Speaker #5: Thank you. Thank you, Eric. Thank you, Michelle.

Peter Levine: Thank you. Thank you, Eric. Thank you.

Peter Levine: Thank you. Thank you, Eric. Thank you.

Eric Yuan: Thank you.

Eric Yuan: Thank you.

Speaker #4: Thank you.

Speaker #1: Our next question comes from Siti Panagrahi from Mizuo.

Operator: Our next question comes from Siti Panigrahi from Mizuho.

Operator: Our next question comes from Siti Panigrahi from Mizuho.

Speaker #6: Hey, guys. Thank you for taking the question. Chad on here for Siti. I think the Americas revenue growth trend has been pretty clear and quite strong throughout this fiscal year.

[Analyst] (Citi): Hey, guys. Thank you for taking the question. Chad on here for Citi. you know, I think the Americas revenue growth trend has been pretty clear and quite strong throughout this fiscal year. I was wondering if you could dive a little bit into the trends you're seeing internationally and sort of any key initiatives there for the current year to reaccelerate growth there.

Siti Panigrahi: Hey, guys. Thank you for taking the question. Chad on here for Citi. you know, I think the Americas revenue growth trend has been pretty clear and quite strong throughout this fiscal year. I was wondering if you could dive a little bit into the trends you're seeing internationally and sort of any key initiatives there for the current year to reaccelerate growth there.

Speaker #6: I was wondering if you could dive a little bit into the trends you're seeing internationally, and sort of any key initiatives there for the upcoming—the current year—to re-accelerate.

Speaker #6: Growth there.

Speaker #1: Eric, do you want to take that one, or do you want me to?

Michelle Chang: Eric, do you want to take that one, or do you want me to?

Michelle Chang: Eric, do you want to take that one, or do you want me to?

Speaker #3: Yeah, go ahead, please.

Eric Yuan: Yeah, go ahead, please.

Eric Yuan: Yeah, go ahead, please.

Speaker #1: Yeah. I mean, look, I would point to we're pleased I think we gave the constant currency growth rates, but they're up and growing across our international business.

Michelle Chang: Yeah, I mean, look, I would point to, you know, we're pleased. I think we gave the constant currency growth rates, but they're up and growing across our international business. Maybe the, you know, thing that I would call out is, I think as we move into areas like Zoom Contact Center and, you know, Zoom Phone as well as Workvivo, that's giving us, together with investments in channel, an opportunity really to break into international markets. You know, it is something that we're investing in. We've also done maybe more local investments like UK data center, but it's something that we're focused on, and with our broader product expansion, AI monetization, as well as channel investments, is something we think will grow in the future.

Michelle Chang: Yeah, I mean, look, I would point to, you know, we're pleased. I think we gave the constant currency growth rates, but they're up and growing across our international business. Maybe the, you know, thing that I would call out is, I think as we move into areas like Zoom Contact Center and, you know, Zoom Phone as well as Workvivo, that's giving us, together with investments in channel, an opportunity really to break into international markets. You know, it is something that we're investing in. We've also done maybe more local investments like UK data center, but it's something that we're focused on, and with our broader product expansion, AI monetization, as well as channel investments, is something we think will grow in the future.

Speaker #1: Maybe the thing that I would call out is I think as we move into areas like contact center and phone as well as Workvivo, that's giving us together with investments in channel an opportunity really to break into international markets.

Speaker #1: So it is something that we're investing in. We've also done maybe more local investments like UK data center. But it's something that we're focused on.

Speaker #1: And with our broader product expansion, AI monetization as well as channel investments is something we think will grow in the future. Next up, we have a question from Alex Zukin with Wolf Research.

Operator: Next up, we have a question from Alex Zukin with Wolfe Research.

Operator: Next up, we have a question from Alex Zukin with Wolfe Research.

Speaker #5: Yeah. Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my question. I'll maybe make mine pretty quick. There's been a lot of questions around I think just your ownership structure of some of the larger foundation model companies.

Alex Zukin: Yeah. Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my question. I'll maybe make mine pretty quick. There's been a lot of questions around, I think, just your ownership structure of some of the larger foundation model companies. I know we haven't talked about it or asked about it, but given it's such a wide-ranging topic, maybe I'll let you address it to the extent that you want to, specifically maybe on the Anthropic stake. Then, Michelle, for you, just any comments about how clearly the growth on phone, contact center was really, really strong this year.

Alex Zukin: Yeah. Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my question. I'll maybe make mine pretty quick. There's been a lot of questions around, I think, just your ownership structure of some of the larger foundation model companies. I know we haven't talked about it or asked about it, but given it's such a wide-ranging topic, maybe I'll let you address it to the extent that you want to, specifically maybe on the Anthropic stake. Then, Michelle, for you, just any comments about how clearly the growth on phone, contact center was really, really strong this year.

Speaker #5: I know we haven't talked about it or asked about it, but given its such a wide-ranging topic, maybe I'll let you address it to the extent that you want to specifically maybe on the Anthropic stake.

Speaker #5: And then Michelle, for you, just any comments about how clearly the growth on phone contact center was really, really strong this year as you look at the guide implicit?

Alex Zukin: As you look at the guide implicit, I know you don't give product level guidance, but as we think about the sustainability of mid-teens growth in phone, the sustainability of whatever very high rates of growth are in Zoom Contact Center, how should we think about those? Particularly since you don't want us to pull any kind of forward-looking dimension from the diverge.

Alex Zukin: As you look at the guide implicit, I know you don't give product level guidance, but as we think about the sustainability of mid-teens growth in phone, the sustainability of whatever very high rates of growth are in Zoom Contact Center, how should we think about those? Particularly since you don't want us to pull any kind of forward-looking dimension from the diverge.

Speaker #5: I know you don't give product-level guidance, but as we think about the sustainability of mid-teens growth in Phone, and the sustainability of whatever very high rates of growth are in Zoom Contact Center, how should we think about those, particularly since you don't want us to pull any kind of forward-looking dimension from the deferreds?

Speaker #1: Perfect. So let me hit Anthropic first, and then we'll round Alex with the product questions. Look, in our results, you will see a total strategic investment.

Michelle Chang: Perfect.... Let me hit on Anthropic first, and then we'll round to Alex with the product question. Look, in our results, you will see a total strategic investment. Zoom has a Zoom venture sum that we use to strategically invest in tech that we feel like is important to Zoom, and you'll see the total balance of that at $1.6 billion. In Q4, you'll see a gain of $532 million pre-tax. This is due mainly, of course, to the change in the valuation of Anthropic after their last round. Look, we have a minority stake, but Anthropic is a critical partner.

Michelle Chang: Perfect.... Let me hit on Anthropic first, and then we'll round to Alex with the product question. Look, in our results, you will see a total strategic investment. Zoom has a Zoom venture sum that we use to strategically invest in tech that we feel like is important to Zoom, and you'll see the total balance of that at $1.6 billion. In Q4, you'll see a gain of $532 million pre-tax. This is due mainly, of course, to the change in the valuation of Anthropic after their last round. Look, we have a minority stake, but Anthropic is a critical partner.

Speaker #1: Zoom has a Zoom Ventures fund that we use to strategically invest in tech that we feel like is important to Zoom. And you'll see the total balance of that at 1.6 billion.

Speaker #1: And in Q4, you'll see a gain of 532 million pre-tax. This is due mainly, of course, to the change in the valuation of Anthropic after their last round.

Speaker #1: Look, we have a minority stake, but Anthropic is a critical partner. Zoom has long-standing talked about our federated approach to AI, and Anthropic is key to our roadmap and a great partner in our federated approach.

Michelle Chang: Zoom has long-standing talks about our federated approach to AI. Anthropic is, you know, key to our roadmap and a great partner in our federated approach. On the, you know, sort of durability, if I get your question right, Alex, on phone, you know, I really look at just, you know, we've seen continual. I'm gonna hit phone, and then I'll wrap with contact center. Phone, we've been seeing, you know, very durable mid-teens growth. We haven't updated our penetration stats in Zoom, but in Zoomtopia, I think in 2024, we said it was 19% of our meeting space. I think that just both speaks to progress and opportunity going forward.

Michelle Chang: Zoom has long-standing talks about our federated approach to AI. Anthropic is, you know, key to our roadmap and a great partner in our federated approach. On the, you know, sort of durability, if I get your question right, Alex, on phone, you know, I really look at just, you know, we've seen continual. I'm gonna hit phone, and then I'll wrap with contact center. Phone, we've been seeing, you know, very durable mid-teens growth. We haven't updated our penetration stats in Zoom, but in Zoomtopia, I think in 2024, we said it was 19% of our meeting space. I think that just both speaks to progress and opportunity going forward.

Speaker #1: On the sort of durability, if I get your question right, Alex, on phone, I really look at just we've seen continuum. I'm going to hit phone, and then I'll wrap with contact center.

Speaker #1: Phone. We've been seeing very durable mid-teens growth. Look, we have an updated our penetration stats in Zoom. But in Zoomtopia, I think in '24, we said it was 19% of our meeting space.

Speaker #1: I think that just both speaks to progress and opportunity going forward. And then, look, on the phone side, I just look at all the examples that Eric talked about: leading insurance, Cisco WIN, and S10, a Cisco WIN, major fast food chain, RingCentral WIN, and really feel like a major US bank, Microsoft Cisco WIN.

Michelle Chang: Look, you know, on the phone side, I just look at all the examples that Eric Yuan talked about, leading insurance, you know, Cisco win, an S10, a Cisco win, major fast food chain, RingCentral win, and really feel like a major US bank, a Microsoft Cisco win. We feel great about the share gains on phone. On contact center, you know, what I would point to there is just multiple quarters, now 4 quarters at high double digit, and actually Q4 accelerating off that. I think, Alex Zukin, you've been a great noter of this, you know, is to look at the makeup of contact center as reflective of where we will go. For many quarters, we've been talking about the majority of the top 10 deals being large displacements.

Michelle Chang: Look, you know, on the phone side, I just look at all the examples that Eric Yuan talked about, leading insurance, you know, Cisco win, an S10, a Cisco win, major fast food chain, RingCentral win, and really feel like a major US bank, a Microsoft Cisco win. We feel great about the share gains on phone. On contact center, you know, what I would point to there is just multiple quarters, now 4 quarters at high double digit, and actually Q4 accelerating off that. I think, Alex Zukin, you've been a great noter of this, you know, is to look at the makeup of contact center as reflective of where we will go. For many quarters, we've been talking about the majority of the top 10 deals being large displacements.

Speaker #1: So, we feel great about the share gains on phone. On Contact Center, what I would point to there is just multiple quarters—now, four quarters at high double-digit, and actually Q4 accelerating off that.

Speaker #1: But really, and I think, Alex, you've been a great noter of this—it's to look at the makeup of Contact Center as reflective of where we will go.

Speaker #1: For many quarters, we've been talking about the majority of the top 10 deals being large displacements. We've been talking for quarters about the value really coming in AI.

Michelle Chang: We've been talking for quarters about the value really coming in AI, now 10 of 10. To Eric's point, 4 of 10 in voice, which has been, you know, a new entrance for Zoom in the summer. We did a 2.0 refresh, even yesterday, we announced a 3.0. Really, maybe if I could wrap with one stat, which is how oftentimes these things come together. I think it's a great example of what Eric introduced in this system of action, of both inside the organization and outside, just what a powerful element that is. 6 of our 10 largest Contact Center deals, as an example, pulled through phone as well.

Michelle Chang: We've been talking for quarters about the value really coming in AI, now 10 of 10. To Eric's point, 4 of 10 in voice, which has been, you know, a new entrance for Zoom in the summer. We did a 2.0 refresh, even yesterday, we announced a 3.0. Really, maybe if I could wrap with one stat, which is how oftentimes these things come together. I think it's a great example of what Eric introduced in this system of action, of both inside the organization and outside, just what a powerful element that is. 6 of our 10 largest Contact Center deals, as an example, pulled through phone as well.

Speaker #1: Now, 10 of 10. And to Eric’s point, 4 of 10 invoice, which has been a new entrance for Zoom in the summer. We did a 2.0 refresh.

Speaker #1: And even yesterday, we announced a 3.0. And really, maybe if I could wrap with one stat, which is how oftentimes these things come together.

Speaker #1: And I think it's a great example of what Eric introduced in the system of action of both inside the organization and outside, just what a powerful element that is.

Speaker #1: And six of our 10 largest contact center deals, as an example, hold true phone as well.

Speaker #3: Yeah, so just to quickly—Alex, it's such a great question. To add on to what Michelle said, we talk about the top 10 Zoom Phone deals and Zoom Contact Center deals doing very well.

Eric Yuan: Yeah. Just quickly, Alex, this is such a great question to add on to what Michelle said. We talk about the top 10, you know, Zoom Phone deals, Zoom Contact Center deals are doing very well. This is more like for a lot of enterprise. I think this year, you look at SMB, also a huge opportunity. The reason why, because of AI. You know, our AI is very affordable, federated AI approach, right? Look at last December. I look at a human, you know, area test, you know, Zoom ranking at number 1 for a while, right? You know, because those investment, you know, because of the price and also the latency of the technology, I think we have a huge opportunity for all of those SMB customers as well, because of AI.

Eric Yuan: Yeah. Just quickly, Alex, this is such a great question to add on to what Michelle said. We talk about the top 10, you know, Zoom Phone deals, Zoom Contact Center deals are doing very well. This is more like for a lot of enterprise. I think this year, you look at SMB, also a huge opportunity. The reason why, because of AI. You know, our AI is very affordable, federated AI approach, right? Look at last December. I look at a human, you know, area test, you know, Zoom ranking at number 1 for a while, right? You know, because those investment, you know, because of the price and also the latency of the technology, I think we have a huge opportunity for all of those SMB customers as well, because of AI.

Speaker #3: This is more like for a lot of enterprise. I think this year, you look at SMB, also a huge opportunity. The reason why? Because of AI.

Speaker #3: Our AI is very affordable. Federated AI approach, right? You look at the last December. I look at a human HRE test. Zoom ranked number one for a while, right?

Speaker #3: So because those investments because of the price and also the latency of the technology, I think we have a huge opportunity for all of those SMB customers as well because of AI.

Speaker #3: So yeah.

Speaker #1: And especially true, just to mark Eric's comment, because it's such a good one that is especially true in ZVA. So great to see the new product value, which will really open up new opportunities down the market.

Michelle Chang: Especially true, you know, just to mark Eric's comment, because it's such a good one, that is especially true in ZVA. Great to see the new product value, which will really, open up new opportunities down the market.

Michelle Chang: Especially true, you know, just to mark Eric's comment, because it's such a good one, that is especially true in ZVA. Great to see the new product value, which will really, open up new opportunities down the market.

Speaker #5: Thank you both.

Josh Baer: Thank you both.

Alex Zukin: Thank you both.

Speaker #1: Yeah.

Michelle Chang: Yeah.

Michelle Chang: Yeah.

Speaker #3: Thank you, Alex.

Eric Yuan: Thank you, Alex.

Eric Yuan: Thank you, Alex.

Speaker #1: Up next, we have a question from Josh Baer with Morgan Stanley.

Operator: Up next, we have a question from Josh Baer with Morgan Stanley.

Operator: Up next, we have a question from Josh Baer with Morgan Stanley.

Speaker #6: Great. Thank you very much for the question. And congrats on a strong quarter. You obviously have the horizontal tools that every single knowledge worker in the world can use, but you're also building this portfolio of very departmental solutions, marketing.

Josh Baer: Great. Thank you very much for the question. And congrats on a strong quarter. You, you obviously have the horizontal tools that every single knowledge worker in the world can use, but you're also building this portfolio of very departmental solutions, marketing, sales, HR, contact center. A strategy question for you, Eric: How do you balance addressing additional departments and roles with new products versus going deep into these areas, rolling out more solutions in these departments that you're already in, and balancing all of that with the horizontal play? Thanks.

Josh Baer: Great. Thank you very much for the question. And congrats on a strong quarter. You, you obviously have the horizontal tools that every single knowledge worker in the world can use, but you're also building this portfolio of very departmental solutions, marketing, sales, HR, contact center. A strategy question for you, Eric: How do you balance addressing additional departments and roles with new products versus going deep into these areas, rolling out more solutions in these departments that you're already in, and balancing all of that with the horizontal play? Thanks.

Speaker #6: Sales, HR, contact center. So strategy question for you, Eric. How do you balance addressing additional departments and roles with new products versus going deep into these areas?

Speaker #6: Rolling out more solutions in these departments that you're already in and balancing all of that with the horizontal play? Thanks.

Speaker #3: Yeah. Josh, wonderful question. Speaking of what a good solution, allow my AI avatar, right? I use that for three quarters already. As you can see, the quality is getting better and better, right?

Eric Yuan: Yeah, Josh, wonderful question. You know, speaking of vertical solution, you know, a lot of my AI avatar, right? I use that for 3 quarters already. As you can see, the quality is getting better and better, right? This is kind of one of the vertical use case, you know, for marketing team. Having said that, I think given the AI evolution, you know, AI coding tools, you know, I think we have a, you know, foundational technology. Now we can do both on horizontal front, right? We keep innovating, you know, and more feature the services, right? And deliver happiness of our customers. You see the AI Companions we got announced in the last December. Also in terms of innovation, a lot of things we are going to announce, new innovations announced at Enterprise Connect. That's on the horizontal front.

Eric Yuan: Yeah, Josh, wonderful question. You know, speaking of vertical solution, you know, a lot of my AI avatar, right? I use that for 3 quarters already. As you can see, the quality is getting better and better, right? This is kind of one of the vertical use case, you know, for marketing team. Having said that, I think given the AI evolution, you know, AI coding tools, you know, I think we have a, you know, foundational technology. Now we can do both on horizontal front, right? We keep innovating, you know, and more feature the services, right? And deliver happiness of our customers. You see the AI Companions we got announced in the last December. Also in terms of innovation, a lot of things we are going to announce, new innovations announced at Enterprise Connect. That's on the horizontal front.

Speaker #3: It's kind of one of the vertical use cases for marketing team. Having started that, I think given the AI evolution, AI coding tools, I think we have a foundational technology.

Speaker #3: Now we can do both. On horizontal front, right? We keep innovating. And more features, services, right? And deliver happiness of our customers. You see the AI companies really announced last December.

Speaker #3: And also, in terms of innovation, a lot of things we're going to announce, new innovations announced at the Enterprise Connect. That's on the horizontal front.

Speaker #3: Look at each vertical use case. It’s a departmental use case or vertical market use cases. I think because of AI, I think we can monetize.

Eric Yuan: You look at each vertical use case, either departmental use case or vertical market use cases. I think, you know, because of AI, I think we can monetize. That's why we also want to double down on those use cases. You know, customer support is one example, ZRA, you know, webinar, you know, BrightHire, you know, almost every, you know, vertical use case. I think we can leverage AI to quickly penetrate into those market we never thought about it before. That's why, you know, we are very excited, you know, because of AI.

Eric Yuan: You look at each vertical use case, either departmental use case or vertical market use cases. I think, you know, because of AI, I think we can monetize. That's why we also want to double down on those use cases. You know, customer support is one example, ZRA, you know, webinar, you know, BrightHire, you know, almost every, you know, vertical use case. I think we can leverage AI to quickly penetrate into those market we never thought about it before. That's why, you know, we are very excited, you know, because of AI.

Speaker #3: That's why we also want to double down on those use cases. Customer support is one example: ZRA, Webinar, Bright AI—almost every vertical use case.

Speaker #3: I think we can leverage AI to quickly penetrate into those market. We never thought about it before. That's why we are very excited because of AI.

Josh Baer: Thank you.

Josh Baer: Thank you.

Eric Yuan: Thank you.

Eric Yuan: Thank you.

Speaker #3: Thank you.

Speaker #1: We have a question from Tyler Radke with Citi.

Operator: We have a question from Tyler Radke with Citi.

Operator: We have a question from Tyler Radke with Citi.

Speaker #6: Hi, thank you. I wanted to ask you about the custom AI companion. You noted some good wins—I think in higher education and some other verticals—in the quarter.

Tyler Radke: Hi, thank you. I wanted to ask you about the Custom AI Companion. You noted some good wins, I think, in higher education and in some other verticals in the quarter.

Tyler Radke: Hi, thank you. I wanted to ask you about the Custom AI Companion. You noted some good wins, I think, in higher education and in some other verticals in the quarter.

Speaker #6: But how are you thinking about that in terms of a driver for FY27? And is this something where you're seeing list price sort of be realized in the field?

Tom Blakey: How are you thinking about that, in terms of, a driver for FY 2027? Is this something where you're seeing list price, sort of be realized in the field, or is there still sort of heavy discounting? Just give us an understanding of sort of how that rolls out, from a go-to-market perspective. Thank you.

Tyler Radke: How are you thinking about that, in terms of, a driver for FY 2027? Is this something where you're seeing list price, sort of be realized in the field, or is there still sort of heavy discounting? Just give us an understanding of sort of how that rolls out, from a go-to-market perspective. Thank you.

Speaker #6: Or is there still sort of heavy discounting? Just give us an understanding of how that rolls out from a go-to-market perspective. Thank you.

Speaker #3: Yeah. So you look at a customer AI company, again, AI company is part of our offering. It's for free. It's become more and more powerful.

Eric Yuan: Yeah. You look at a Custom AI Companion. Again, AI Companion is part of our offering. It's for free, it's become more and more powerful. You know, the way for us to monetize AI Companion is to go through the Custom AI Companion, in particular for medium and large enterprise customers, because with the third-party applications, you know, connectors, and also we built in a workflow and no-code workflow to build an agent. That's kind of our vision, right? From a composition to completion. If you do not have very flexible workflow builder to help you build an agent, how can you know, complete a task, right? You know, because, you know, used to be all Zoom, just you know, the collaboration.

Eric Yuan: Yeah. You look at a Custom AI Companion. Again, AI Companion is part of our offering. It's for free, it's become more and more powerful. You know, the way for us to monetize AI Companion is to go through the Custom AI Companion, in particular for medium and large enterprise customers, because with the third-party applications, you know, connectors, and also we built in a workflow and no-code workflow to build an agent. That's kind of our vision, right? From a composition to completion. If you do not have very flexible workflow builder to help you build an agent, how can you know, complete a task, right? You know, because, you know, used to be all Zoom, just you know, the collaboration.

Speaker #3: But the way for us to monetize AI company is to go through the customer AI company in particular for medium and large enterprise customers because with the third-party applications, connectors, and also we built it in a workflow.

Speaker #3: And no-code workflow to build an agent. And that's kind of our vision, right, from a composition to completion. If you do not have very flexible workflow builder to help you build an agent, how can you complete a task, right?

Speaker #3: So because you used to be on Zoom just the collaboration, now with the Zoom customer AI company, with workflow connecting with all the third-party applications, more skills, more agents.

Eric Yuan: Now with the Zoom Custom Companion, with workflow, connecting with all the third-party applications, more skills, more agent, and then we can achieve from accommodation to completion. You know, also not only workflow, but also Custom Companion also can give you know, the enterprise knowledge, you know, retrieval, you know, functionality, right? You can connect so many third-party applications, right? I do not need to log into different system. I, within a Zoom AI Companion interface, I can search for any information and help you write, you know, a document, you know, to achieve the task. Essentially, AI Companion, Custom AI Companion, is a customized, you know, workflow builder and also the information search capabilities to connect with all kinds of third-party enterprise applications. It's extremely powerful, and we can monetize for those to target enterprise customers.

Eric Yuan: Now with the Zoom Custom Companion, with workflow, connecting with all the third-party applications, more skills, more agent, and then we can achieve from accommodation to completion. You know, also not only workflow, but also Custom Companion also can give you know, the enterprise knowledge, you know, retrieval, you know, functionality, right? You can connect so many third-party applications, right? I do not need to log into different system. I, within a Zoom AI Companion interface, I can search for any information and help you write, you know, a document, you know, to achieve the task. Essentially, AI Companion, Custom AI Companion, is a customized, you know, workflow builder and also the information search capabilities to connect with all kinds of third-party enterprise applications. It's extremely powerful, and we can monetize for those to target enterprise customers.

Speaker #3: And then we can achieve from a competition to a completion. And also not only workflow, but also customer company also can give you the enterprise knowledge retrieval functionality, right?

Speaker #3: You can connect so many third-party applications, right? I do not need to log into different systems, right? Within the Zoom AI Company interface, I can search for any information and help you write and document to achieve the task.

Speaker #3: Essentially, AI company, customer AI company, is a customized workflow builder and also the information search capabilities to connect with all kinds of third-party enterprise applications.

Speaker #3: It's extremely powerful. And we can monetize for those targeted enterprise customers.

Speaker #1: Up next.

Operator: Up next?

Operator: Up next?

Speaker #3: Yeah. Tyler, go ahead. I think Tyler maybe have follow-up. Yeah. Yeah, yeah.

Eric Yuan: Yeah, Tyler, go ahead. I think Tyler maybe have follow-up.

Eric Yuan: Yeah, Tyler, go ahead. I think Tyler maybe have follow-up.

Tom Blakey: Oh.

Tyler Radke: Oh.

Eric Yuan: Yeah.

Eric Yuan: Yeah.

Tom Blakey: Can you hear me?

Tyler Radke: Can you hear me?

Eric Yuan: Yeah, yeah.

Eric Yuan: Yeah, yeah.

Speaker #6: Oh, sorry. Just any way to is that going to be a contributor to FY27, or is it still kind of early days in terms of that monetization of the premium AI custom companion?

Tom Blakey: Oh, sorry. Is that going to be a contributor to FY 2027, or is it still kind of early days in terms of that monetization of the premium AI, Custom AI Companion?

Tyler Radke: Oh, sorry. Is that going to be a contributor to FY 2027, or is it still kind of early days in terms of that monetization of the premium AI, Custom AI Companion?

Speaker #3: It already contributed, right, to our growth. So, I've already closed the big customer AI company deals. And in the quarter Q3 and Q4, with more innovations for sure, it's going to help us more in FY27.

Eric Yuan: It already contributed, right, to our growth. I've already closed the, you know, the big customer AI Companion deals, you know, in the quarter, in Q3 and Q4. With more innovations for sure, it's going to help us more in FY 2027.

Eric Yuan: It already contributed, right, to our growth. I've already closed the, you know, the big customer AI Companion deals, you know, in the quarter, in Q3 and Q4. With more innovations for sure, it's going to help us more in FY 2027.

Tom Blakey: Great. Thank you.

Tyler Radke: Great. Thank you.

Speaker #3: Thank you.

Eric Yuan: Thank you.

Eric Yuan: Thank you.

Speaker #1: Up next, we have a question from Seth Gilbert with UBS.

Operator: Up next, we have a question from Seth Gilbert with UBS.

Operator: Up next, we have a question from Seth Gilbert with UBS.

Speaker #7: Hey, thanks for the question. Maybe just one. If I hold the online growth, online year-over-year growth at about 1.2% for fiscal 27, that would imply that the enterprise decelerates by about 1 point from the 4Q exit rate of 7%.

Seth Gilbert: Hey, thanks for the question. Maybe just one. If, if I hold the online growth, online year-over-year growth at about, you know, 1.2% for fiscal 2027, that would imply that the enterprise decelerates by about 1 point from the Q4 exit rate of 7%. Maybe a question for you, Michelle. Can you talk about some of the puts and takes here that could cause enterprise to outperform? Thank you.

Seth Gilbert: Hey, thanks for the question. Maybe just one. If, if I hold the online growth, online year-over-year growth at about, you know, 1.2% for fiscal 2027, that would imply that the enterprise decelerates by about 1 point from the Q4 exit rate of 7%. Maybe a question for you, Michelle. Can you talk about some of the puts and takes here that could cause enterprise to outperform? Thank you.

Speaker #7: So maybe a question for you, Michelle. Can you talk about some of the puts and takes here that could cause enterprise to outperform? Thank you.

Speaker #8: Yeah. Is there a question on Q4, or is it more on guiding going forward?

Michelle Chang: Yeah, is your question on Q4 or is more on guiding going forward?

Michelle Chang: Yeah, is your question on Q4 or is more on guiding going forward?

Speaker #7: Oh, it's more on guiding going forward. So, yeah, sorry.

Seth Gilbert: Oh, it's more on, guiding going forward. Yeah, sorry.

Seth Gilbert: Oh, it's more on, guiding going forward. Yeah, sorry.

Speaker #8: Yeah. Look, let me talk about online, and then I'll finish with enterprise. I think online, so pleased to see it return to growth. It was the first time we've had growth since fiscal 22.

Michelle Chang: Yeah. Look, let me talk about online, then I'll finish with Enterprise. I think, you know, online, so pleased to see it return to growth. It was the first time we've had growth since fiscal 22. That growth comes off of adding value in our portfolio of workplace, you know, workplace portfolio, as well as AI. We're able to realize on a price increase as well as, you know, keep record low churn. Our guide assumes an additional price increase on the annual SKU. In line with monthly, it's really just intended to do the same thing as the prior, but bring them into value. Seth, to your more meta question, Enterprise is going to be the durable driver for growth going forward.

Michelle Chang: Yeah. Look, let me talk about online, then I'll finish with Enterprise. I think, you know, online, so pleased to see it return to growth. It was the first time we've had growth since fiscal 22. That growth comes off of adding value in our portfolio of workplace, you know, workplace portfolio, as well as AI. We're able to realize on a price increase as well as, you know, keep record low churn. Our guide assumes an additional price increase on the annual SKU. In line with monthly, it's really just intended to do the same thing as the prior, but bring them into value. Seth, to your more meta question, Enterprise is going to be the durable driver for growth going forward.

Speaker #8: And look, that growth comes off of adding value in our portfolio of workplace portfolio as well as AI. And that's why we're able to realize on a price increase as well as keep record low churn.

Speaker #8: Our guide assumes an additional price increase on the annual SKU, so in line with monthly. It's really just intended to do the same thing as the prior, but bring them into value.

Speaker #8: But look, Seth, to your more meta question, enterprise is going to be the durable driver for growth going forward. And I'll just continue to hit home the components.

Michelle Chang: I'll just continue to hit home the components. It's making progress and meeting churn. It's keeping Phone in that sort of mid, teens growth range. It's continuing with that better together story to pull along Contact Center and realize the AI value. That is by far where we are seeing the most immediate pulls of the incremental AI monetization in both agent-assisted AI as well as the ZVA that Eric and I talked about. Look, there's so much coming on from an AI monetization perspective, both in products, Workvivo Phone, but additionally, beyond that, in new SKUs. We've now opened up a note taker SKU to our free base, as well as, you know, making continually products like ZRA even better.

Michelle Chang: I'll just continue to hit home the components. It's making progress and meeting churn. It's keeping Phone in that sort of mid, teens growth range. It's continuing with that better together story to pull along Contact Center and realize the AI value. That is by far where we are seeing the most immediate pulls of the incremental AI monetization in both agent-assisted AI as well as the ZVA that Eric and I talked about. Look, there's so much coming on from an AI monetization perspective, both in products, Workvivo Phone, but additionally, beyond that, in new SKUs. We've now opened up a note taker SKU to our free base, as well as, you know, making continually products like ZRA even better.

Speaker #8: It's making progress and meeting churn. It's keeping phone and that sort of mid-teens growth range. It's continuing with that better together story to pull along contact center and realize the AI value that is by far where we are seeing the most immediate pulls of incremental AI monetization.

Speaker #8: In both agent-assisted AI as well as the ZBA that Eric and I talked about. And then look, there's so much coming. On from an AI monetization perspective, both in product, work vivo phone, but additionally beyond that in new SKUs.

Speaker #8: We've now opened up a note-taker SKU to our free base, as well as making continual products like ZRA even better. So we look out to the forward.

Michelle Chang: We look out to the forward, and we're excited about the progress that we made this year. 130 basis points, kind of up year-over-year, and we're equally excited, if not more, on the 27 go forward.

Michelle Chang: We look out to the forward, and we're excited about the progress that we made this year. 130 basis points, kind of up year-over-year, and we're equally excited, if not more, on the 27 go forward.

Speaker #8: And we're excited about the progress that we made this year. 130 bps, kind of up year over year. And we're equally excited, if not more, on the '27 go-forward.

Speaker #7: Got it. Thank you.

Seth Gilbert: Got it. Thank you.

Seth Gilbert: Got it. Thank you.

Speaker #1: Up next, we have a question from Tom Blakey with Cantor Fitzgerald.

Operator: Up next, we have a question from Tom Blakey with Cantor Fitzgerald.

Operator: Up next, we have a question from Tom Blakey with Cantor Fitzgerald.

Speaker #9: Hey guys, thanks for taking my question. Eric or Michelle, I'd like to hear about maybe some quantifying of these credits that you called out.

Tom Blakey: Hey, guys, thanks for taking my question. Eric, or Michelle, I'd like to hear about maybe some, you know, quantifying of these credits that you called out. That was interesting. You know, even if it's you can't call it out numerically, just how they're trending. I think the numerical help would kind of understand, help us as a group, understand what kind of headwinds we're talking about that, you know, as you know, I know, Eric, you're managing this business for a multi-year basis here. As they come, you know, you guys are innovating and taking share, when they come off, like, what that would look like. I have a follow-up, if you may.

Tom Blakey: Hey, guys, thanks for taking my question. Eric, or Michelle, I'd like to hear about maybe some, you know, quantifying of these credits that you called out. That was interesting. You know, even if it's you can't call it out numerically, just how they're trending. I think the numerical help would kind of understand, help us as a group, understand what kind of headwinds we're talking about that, you know, as you know, I know, Eric, you're managing this business for a multi-year basis here. As they come, you know, you guys are innovating and taking share, when they come off, like, what that would look like. I have a follow-up, if you may.

Speaker #9: That was interesting. And even if you can't call it out numerically, just how they're trending. I think the numerical help would kind of understand, help us as a group understand what kind of headwinds we're talking about that as I know Eric, you're managing this business for a multi-year basis here.

Speaker #9: As they— you guys are innovating and taking share when they come off, what that would look like. And I have a follow-up, if you may.

Speaker #8: Yeah, I can take that. So, look, it's in line with what I said earlier, which is, again, I just want to continue to emphasize with investors: don't read into this as normal.

Michelle Chang: Yeah, I can take that. Look, it's in line with what I said earlier, which is, again, I just want to continue to emphasize with investors, don't read into this as normal. These are great competitive wins. We're providing a grace period so that I, you know, in exchange for a larger and longer-term competitive platform win. Think of this as helpful in sizing, Tom, as really the primary driver between the detail in Q4 relative to the guide in Q1. If helpful on the other side, maybe what I'd point to is connecting you to that uptick in long-term RPO as helpful sizing.

Michelle Chang: Yeah, I can take that. Look, it's in line with what I said earlier, which is, again, I just want to continue to emphasize with investors, don't read into this as normal. These are great competitive wins. We're providing a grace period so that I, you know, in exchange for a larger and longer-term competitive platform win. Think of this as helpful in sizing, Tom, as really the primary driver between the detail in Q4 relative to the guide in Q1. If helpful on the other side, maybe what I'd point to is connecting you to that uptick in long-term RPO as helpful sizing.

Speaker #8: These are great competitive wins we're providing the grace period so that in exchange for a larger and longer-term competitive platform win. Think of this as helpful in sizing, Tom, as really the primary driver between the detail in Q4 relative to the guide in Q1.

Speaker #8: And it's helpful on the other side. Maybe what I point to is connecting you to that uptick in long-term RPO. As helpful sizing.

Speaker #9: Yeah, that would be helpful. And then, Eric, just combining your and Michelle's comments here—Michelle's guiding us to grow online kind of relatively flat, but you seem awfully excited about the SMB opportunity to maybe equally do as well.

Tom Blakey: Yeah, that would be helpful. Then, Eric, you know, just combining you and Michelle's comments here, Michelle's guiding us to grow online, kind of, relatively flat, but you seem awfully excited about the SMB's opportunity to maybe equally do as well. I know it's early days in terms of maybe tackling the well, the successes that you've had on the enterprise side with CX and Phone, but is it safe to assume that that's, you know, maybe not implied or imputed in that 1, you know, kind of 1% guide for fiscal 27 online?

Tom Blakey: Yeah, that would be helpful. Then, Eric, you know, just combining you and Michelle's comments here, Michelle's guiding us to grow online, kind of, relatively flat, but you seem awfully excited about the SMB's opportunity to maybe equally do as well. I know it's early days in terms of maybe tackling the well, the successes that you've had on the enterprise side with CX and Phone, but is it safe to assume that that's, you know, maybe not implied or imputed in that 1, you know, kind of 1% guide for fiscal 27 online?

Speaker #9: I know it's early days in terms of maybe tackling the successes that you've had on the enterprise side with CX and phone. But is it safe to assume that that's maybe not implied or imputed in that one kind of 1% guide for fiscal 27 online?

Speaker #6: Yeah. So my mission as it be customers, more like a high-end.

Eric Yuan: Yeah, when I mention SMB customers, more like a high end, you know?

Eric Yuan: Yeah, when I mention SMB customers, more like a high end, you know?

Tom Blakey: High end.

Tom Blakey: High end.

Speaker #9: High-end. Yeah.

Eric Yuan: Yeah. Well, the not online buyers is, you know, like SMB customers, right? Used to be, you know, they look at multiple solution now because of power of AI, and also, you know, I think we have a huge opportunity to serve those SMB customers because we have a very rich product portfolio, have this great AI capabilities. Yeah. It's not individual online buyers, and yeah.

Eric Yuan: Yeah. Well, the not online buyers is, you know, like SMB customers, right? Used to be, you know, they look at multiple solution now because of power of AI, and also, you know, I think we have a huge opportunity to serve those SMB customers because we have a very rich product portfolio, have this great AI capabilities. Yeah. It's not individual online buyers, and yeah.

Speaker #6: For the not online buyers, like SMB customers, right? It used to be they looked at multiple solutions. Now, because of powerful AI, they also—I think we have a huge opportunity to serve those SMB customers.

Speaker #6: Because we have a very rich product portfolio, we have this great AI capabilities. Yeah. It's not about individual online buyers. And yeah.

Speaker #9: Michelle, could you comment on Breitbrier? Anything on the top or bottom line impact in fiscal 27? And that's it from me. Thank you.

Tom Blakey: Michelle, could you comment on BrightHire, anything on the top or bottom line impact into fiscal 27? That's it for me. Thank you.

Tom Blakey: Michelle, could you comment on BrightHire, anything on the top or bottom line impact into fiscal 27? That's it for me. Thank you.

Speaker #8: Yeah. So, it closed mid-Q4. So, think of the impact to Q4 as sort of the minimum. The guide reflects, obviously, Breitbrier. And I would just say that it's a perfect example, I think, of what Eric laid out in the earlier question with regards to vertical and horizontal value.

Michelle Chang: Yeah. It closed mid Q4, think of the impact to Q4 as sort of de minimis. The guide, it reflects obviously BrightHire, I would just say that it's a perfect example, I think of what Eric laid out in the earlier question with regards to, you know, vertical and horizontal value. This is a business where we share common customers, there's sort of mutual benefits. This is a product where we have, you know, similarities with really taking AI value to rethink the hiring kind of approach, more insights, efficiencies, as well as you have Workvivo on the other side, sort of thinking about the life cycle of kind of human talent. It's something that they use Zoom in all of their interviews.

Michelle Chang: Yeah. It closed mid Q4, think of the impact to Q4 as sort of de minimis. The guide, it reflects obviously BrightHire, I would just say that it's a perfect example, I think of what Eric laid out in the earlier question with regards to, you know, vertical and horizontal value. This is a business where we share common customers, there's sort of mutual benefits. This is a product where we have, you know, similarities with really taking AI value to rethink the hiring kind of approach, more insights, efficiencies, as well as you have Workvivo on the other side, sort of thinking about the life cycle of kind of human talent. It's something that they use Zoom in all of their interviews.

Speaker #8: So this is a business where we share a common customer. So there's sort of mutual benefits. And this is a product where we have similarities with really taking AI value to rethink the hiring kind of approach—more insights, efficiencies—as well as then you have Workvivo on the other side.

Speaker #8: And sort of thinking about the lifecycle of human talent. So it's something that they use Zoom for in all of their interviews. And so we look at it, and there's natural synergies, and they're relatively small.

Michelle Chang: We look at it, and there's natural synergies, and they're relatively small. This is a small acquisition. You can see the size of it, sub 100. That's helpful.

Michelle Chang: We look at it, and there's natural synergies, and they're relatively small. This is a small acquisition. You can see the size of it, sub 100. That's helpful.

Speaker #8: This is a small acquisition. You can see the size of it sub-100. So that's helpful.

Speaker #9: Excellent. Very helpful. Thank you, guys.

Tom Blakey: Excellent. Very helpful. Thank you, guys.

Tom Blakey: Excellent. Very helpful. Thank you, guys.

Speaker #6: Thank you, Tom.

Eric Yuan: Thank you, Tom.

Eric Yuan: Thank you, Tom.

Speaker #1: Our next question comes from Samad Samana with Jefferies.

Operator: Our next question comes from Samad Samana with Jefferies.

Operator: Our next question comes from Samad Samana with Jefferies.

Speaker #10: Hi. Good evening. Thanks for sharing my question. So, I wanted to ask about pricing. You guys have continued to create a lot of value.

Samad Samana: Hi, good evening. Thanks for taking my question. I wanted to ask about pricing. You guys have continued to create a lot of value. You've obviously, part of it is to drive better retention, which we've seen over the years. Some of it is to be expressed in kind of monetary terms. How are you thinking about that balance for fiscal 27, Michelle? What are you assuming in the guidance, if anything, from a price increase perspective? To the extent, well, I'm sorry for the 11-part question. I'm learning from some of my peers, but if you have, can you give us a sense of, like, timing around that assumption as well?

Samad Samana: Hi, good evening. Thanks for taking my question. I wanted to ask about pricing. You guys have continued to create a lot of value. You've obviously, part of it is to drive better retention, which we've seen over the years. Some of it is to be expressed in kind of monetary terms. How are you thinking about that balance for fiscal 27, Michelle? What are you assuming in the guidance, if anything, from a price increase perspective? To the extent, well, I'm sorry for the 11-part question. I'm learning from some of my peers, but if you have, can you give us a sense of, like, timing around that assumption as well?

Speaker #10: You've obviously part of it is to drive better retention, which we've seen over the years. Some of it is to be expressed in kind of monetary terms.

Speaker #10: How are you thinking about that balance for fiscal 27, Michelle? And what are you assuming in the guidance, if anything, from a price increase perspective?

Speaker #10: And to the extent—I'm sorry for the 11-part question. I'm learning from some of my peers. But if you have, can you give us a sense of timing around that assumption as well?

Speaker #8: Yeah. All right. Let me hit explicitly the online and then I'll move and talk about our enterprise because I think the dynamics look a little bit different.

Michelle Chang: Yeah.

Michelle Chang: Yeah.

Speaker #10: Thank you so much.

Samad Samana: Thank you so much.

Samad Samana: Thank you so much.

Michelle Chang: All right. Let me hit explicitly the online, and then I'll move and talk about our enterprise, because I think the dynamics look a little bit different. Our online guide includes a price increase of 6% to go into effective mid-March to our annual SKU. Think of this as this is really the flip side of what we did last year. I really encourage investors not to think about it as a price increase. Price increase is just one mechanism for realizing incremental value to customers. Price increase, ongoing, if you will, is not something that Zoom is going to use. It's going to come with incremental value. In this case, it came with much more value across chat, calendar, meetings, whiteboard, et cetera, et cetera, in our Workplace, as well as AI value.

Michelle Chang: All right. Let me hit explicitly the online, and then I'll move and talk about our enterprise, because I think the dynamics look a little bit different. Our online guide includes a price increase of 6% to go into effective mid-March to our annual SKU. Think of this as this is really the flip side of what we did last year. I really encourage investors not to think about it as a price increase. Price increase is just one mechanism for realizing incremental value to customers. Price increase, ongoing, if you will, is not something that Zoom is going to use. It's going to come with incremental value. In this case, it came with much more value across chat, calendar, meetings, whiteboard, et cetera, et cetera, in our Workplace, as well as AI value.

Speaker #8: So our online guide includes a price increase of 6% to go into effect in mid-March to our annual SKU. So think of this as, this is really the flip side of what we did last year.

Speaker #8: And I really encourage investors not to think about it as a price increase. A price increase is just one mechanism for realizing incremental value to customers.

Speaker #8: So price increase ongoing, if you will, is not something that Zoom is going to use. It's going to come with incremental value. In this case, it came with much more value across chat, calendar, meetings, whiteboard, etc., etc.

Speaker #8: In our workplace, as well as AI value. So that's really what's behind that. So that's sort of how to think about the online side.

Michelle Chang: That's really what's behind that. That's sort of how to think about the online side. On the enterprise side as well, you know, one, important to note that those prices then impact the enterprise. Look, there we're going to focus much more on, you know, total contract value, things like discounting and contract, sorry, duration. Those would be baked into our guide given.

Michelle Chang: That's really what's behind that. That's sort of how to think about the online side. On the enterprise side as well, you know, one, important to note that those prices then impact the enterprise. Look, there we're going to focus much more on, you know, total contract value, things like discounting and contract, sorry, duration. Those would be baked into our guide given.

Speaker #8: And on the enterprise side as well, one important to note that those prices then impact the enterprise. But look, there, we're going to focus much more on total contract value, things like discounting and contact contract, sorry, duration.

Speaker #8: And those would be baked into our guide given.

Speaker #10: Great. Thank you so much. Appreciate it.

Samad Samana: Great. Thank you so much. Appreciate it.

Samad Samana: Great. Thank you so much. Appreciate it.

Speaker #6: Thank you.

Eric Yuan: Thank you.

Eric Yuan: Thank you.

Speaker #1: Our next question comes from Ryan. Nick Williams. With Wells Fargo.

Operator: Our next question comes from Ryan MacWilliams with Wells Fargo.

Operator: Our next question comes from Ryan MacWilliams with Wells Fargo.

Speaker #11: Hey, guys. This is Chris on for Ryan. Thanks for taking our question. Eric, you've mentioned in the past doubling down on the product side.

[Analyst] (Wells Fargo): Hey, guys. This is Chris on for Ryan. Thanks for taking our question. Eric, you've mentioned in the past, doubling down on the product side. We were curious if in the last few months, you've seen any product velocity improvements from Gemini coding tools like you were mentioning. If you're thinking about product investments any different this year compared to last year?

[Analyst] (Wells Fargo): Hey, guys. This is Chris on for Ryan. Thanks for taking our question. Eric, you've mentioned in the past, doubling down on the product side. We were curious if in the last few months, you've seen any product velocity improvements from Gemini coding tools like you were mentioning. If you're thinking about product investments any different this year compared to last year?

Speaker #11: And so, we were curious if, in the last few months, you've seen any product velocity improvements from Magenta coding tools, like you were mentioning.

Speaker #11: And if you're thinking about product investments, is there anything different this year compared to last year?

Speaker #6: Yeah. So a while back, right? So we all adopt AI coding tools. It's getting more and more powerful. And especially for the new product, the development, right, or new service, right?

Eric Yuan: Yeah. A while back, right, we already adopt, you know, AI, you know, coding tools. It's getting more and more powerful, and especially for the new product, the development, right, or new service, right? Certainly, accelerated our piece of innovation. At the same time, we also have, you know, a lot of the, you know, existing services, right? A lot of, you know, code written by our engineers, right? I do not think that the AI coding tools is powerful enough, right, to maintain all those, you know, millions of the lines of a coding yet, right? I'm excited that you look at it not only for engineers, but also the UI designers, product managers, almost everywhere, right, we can have the AI coding tools to improve our productivity.

Eric Yuan: Yeah. A while back, right, we already adopt, you know, AI, you know, coding tools. It's getting more and more powerful, and especially for the new product, the development, right, or new service, right? Certainly, accelerated our piece of innovation. At the same time, we also have, you know, a lot of the, you know, existing services, right? A lot of, you know, code written by our engineers, right? I do not think that the AI coding tools is powerful enough, right, to maintain all those, you know, millions of the lines of a coding yet, right? I'm excited that you look at it not only for engineers, but also the UI designers, product managers, almost everywhere, right, we can have the AI coding tools to improve our productivity.

Speaker #6: Suddenly, it accelerated our piece of innovation. But at the same time, we also have a lot of the existing services, right? And a lot of code written by other engineers, right?

Speaker #6: I do not think that AI coding tools are powerful enough, right, to maintain all those millions in length of code yet. Right?

Speaker #6: So, having started that, you look at not only for engineers, but also the UI designers, product managers—almost everywhere, right? We can leverage AI coding tools to improve our productivity.

Speaker #6: Essentially, we drive the innovation the speed. And you look at the product area, we invest. Like ZVA, for sure, is really a great example.

Eric Yuan: Essentially, we drive the innovation, you know, the speed. You look at the product area we invest, you know, like ZVA for sure is a great example. You know, we kind of building in a lot of, you know, new features, you know, and it's probably in terms of speed and better than any time in our company history, right? You know, that's the reason why over the past few months, you know, customers feel like, wow, you know, you add this feature, the other feature, you know, much better position. This is a great example, because AI coding tools and also because the way we embrace the AI. Again, it's not only for engineers, but the entire, you know, product development, you know, life cycle.

Eric Yuan: Essentially, we drive the innovation, you know, the speed. You look at the product area we invest, you know, like ZVA for sure is a great example. You know, we kind of building in a lot of, you know, new features, you know, and it's probably in terms of speed and better than any time in our company history, right? You know, that's the reason why over the past few months, you know, customers feel like, wow, you know, you add this feature, the other feature, you know, much better position. This is a great example, because AI coding tools and also because the way we embrace the AI. Again, it's not only for engineers, but the entire, you know, product development, you know, life cycle.

Speaker #6: And we kind of built in a lot of new features. And it's probably in terms of speed, and better than any time in our company history, right?

Speaker #6: That's the reason why, over the past few months, the cost of feedback—wow, you add this feature, the other feature—much better position. This is a great example because of AI coding tools and also because of the way we embrace the AI.

Speaker #6: So again, not only for engineers, but the entire product development, the lifecycle, so.

Speaker #11: Awesome. Thank you, guys.

William Power: Awesome. Thank you, guys.

[Analyst] (Wells Fargo): Awesome. Thank you, guys.

Speaker #6: Thank you.

Eric Yuan: Thank you.

Eric Yuan: Thank you.

Speaker #1: Our next question comes from Jackson Ader with KeyBank.

Operator: Our next question comes from Jackson Ader with KeyBanc.

Operator: Our next question comes from Jackson Ader with KeyBanc.

Speaker #9: Great. Good evening, guys. Thanks for taking our questions. The question I have is on is around the channel. And I think you guys have made a bunch of improvements and enhancements to the channel partner program the last few quarters.

Jackson Ader: Great, good evening, guys. Thanks for taking our questions. The question I have is on, is around the channel, and I think you guys have made a bunch of improvements and enhancements to the channel partner program the last few quarters and last year. Really, I'm curious, number one, any kind of, you know, continued enhancements that you definitely know are going to be implemented here that should help for growth in 2027? Then also it seems like, you know, I understand there are some kind of headwinds, tailwinds to the margin for fiscal 2027. I'm just curious, is that, is that due to the mix of the type of investments you're making, meaning channel versus direct? Or is it just the overall amount of investments that you're making? Thank you.

Jackson Ader: Great, good evening, guys. Thanks for taking our questions. The question I have is on, is around the channel, and I think you guys have made a bunch of improvements and enhancements to the channel partner program the last few quarters and last year. Really, I'm curious, number one, any kind of, you know, continued enhancements that you definitely know are going to be implemented here that should help for growth in 2027? Then also it seems like, you know, I understand there are some kind of headwinds, tailwinds to the margin for fiscal 2027. I'm just curious, is that, is that due to the mix of the type of investments you're making, meaning channel versus direct? Or is it just the overall amount of investments that you're making? Thank you.

Speaker #9: And last year. And so really, I'm curious, number one, any kind of continued enhancements that you definitely know are going to be implemented here that should help for growth in 2027?

Speaker #9: And then also, it seems like I understand there are some kind of headwinds, tailwinds to the margins for fiscal 27. I'm just curious, is that due to the mix of the type of investments you're making, meaning channel versus direct?

Speaker #9: Or is it just the overall amount of investments that you're making? Thank you.

Speaker #8: Yeah. Let me go ahead and take that, and then Eric, you can pepper in as easy as you said. Look, channel, if you think about sort of those durable elements of revenue growth, is going to be essential to things like a phone business and a contact center.

Michelle Chang: Yeah, let me go ahead and take that. Then, Eric, you can pepper in as Eric said. Look, channel, if you think about sort of those durable elements of revenue growth, is gonna be essential to things like a phone business and a contact center. It's just how, you know, customers procure in that space. Also, it just speaks to, you know, beyond just the software, the consulting, the deployment, just how customers, you know, interact with partners. Look, this is something we've been very intentional about, and I think you can see it in our revenue growth inflection. Look, in terms of quick couple of stats and things of why we feel great about our investments. You can see it in our large contact center wins, 9 of 10 in channel.

Michelle Chang: Yeah, let me go ahead and take that. Then, Eric, you can pepper in as Eric said. Look, channel, if you think about sort of those durable elements of revenue growth, is gonna be essential to things like a phone business and a contact center. It's just how, you know, customers procure in that space. Also, it just speaks to, you know, beyond just the software, the consulting, the deployment, just how customers, you know, interact with partners. Look, this is something we've been very intentional about, and I think you can see it in our revenue growth inflection. Look, in terms of quick couple of stats and things of why we feel great about our investments. You can see it in our large contact center wins, 9 of 10 in channel.

Speaker #8: It's just how customers procure in that space. And also, it just speaks to, beyond just the software—the consulting, the deployment—just how customers interact with partners.

Speaker #8: And look, this is something we've been very intentional about, and I think you can see it in our revenue growth inflection. In terms of a quick couple of stats and things of why we feel great about our investments, you can see it in our large contact center wins.

Speaker #8: 9 of 10 in channel. Our channel-based business continues to grow. And frankly, the proportion of new customers coming from channel, to me, is especially exciting.

Michelle Chang: Our channel base continues to grow. Frankly, the proportion of new customers coming from channel, to me, is especially exciting. The kinds of things that we're investing in, to your question, look, it's around incentives. We made, starting last year, a lot of system capabilities and portals so that we really help enable, especially to all of the product value that Eric mentioned, and things like ZVA coming out at incrementally fast, levels. You know, we want to make sure that our ecosystem is ready there with us. So we'll invest in that. Then maybe the last channel investment that I would mention is we're bridging that into, things like systems providers, which we think is gonna be really important going forward.

Michelle Chang: Our channel base continues to grow. Frankly, the proportion of new customers coming from channel, to me, is especially exciting. The kinds of things that we're investing in, to your question, look, it's around incentives. We made, starting last year, a lot of system capabilities and portals so that we really help enable, especially to all of the product value that Eric mentioned, and things like ZVA coming out at incrementally fast, levels. You know, we want to make sure that our ecosystem is ready there with us. So we'll invest in that. Then maybe the last channel investment that I would mention is we're bridging that into, things like systems providers, which we think is gonna be really important going forward.

Speaker #8: The kinds of things that we're investing in, to your question, look, it's around incentives. We made starting last year a lot of system capabilities and portals so that we really help enable.

Speaker #8: Especially with all of the product value that Eric mentioned, and things like ZVA coming out at incrementally fast levels, we want to make sure that our ecosystem is ready there with us.

Speaker #8: And so we'll invest in that. And then maybe the last channel investment that I would mention is we're bridging that into things like systems providers, which we think is going to be really important going forward.

Speaker #8: On your operating margin guide, let me make some comments because I want to make sure that people really understand the bigger picture here. So we guided to 40 and a half at the midpoint.

Michelle Chang: On the operating margin guide, let me make some comments because I want to make sure that people really understand the bigger picture here. We guided to 40.5 at the midpoint. Wanna obviously, beyond the mechanics of, you know, reminding that we've used as a consistent forecast methodology, really wanna make sure that investors understand the two dynamics which are not channel. We're up 180 basis points due to the amortization change that we referenced in scripts, and then that's offset in part by the comp changes. We're in our second year of shifting from stock-based compensation to cash. Those are really the headlines to think about in terms of the op margin versus anything channel.

Michelle Chang: On the operating margin guide, let me make some comments because I want to make sure that people really understand the bigger picture here. We guided to 40.5 at the midpoint. Wanna obviously, beyond the mechanics of, you know, reminding that we've used as a consistent forecast methodology, really wanna make sure that investors understand the two dynamics which are not channel. We're up 180 basis points due to the amortization change that we referenced in scripts, and then that's offset in part by the comp changes. We're in our second year of shifting from stock-based compensation to cash. Those are really the headlines to think about in terms of the op margin versus anything channel.

Speaker #8: Want to obviously, beyond the mechanics of reminding that we've used as a consistent forecast methodology, really want to make sure that investors understand the two dynamics, which are not channel.

Speaker #8: We're up 180 basis points due to the amortization change that we referenced in the script. And then that's offset in part by the comp changes—we're in our second year of shifting from stock-based compensation to cash.

Speaker #8: So those are really the headlines to think about in terms of the margins. Versus anything channel.

Speaker #6: Got it. Thank you very much, guys.

Jackson Ader: Got it. Thank you very much, guys.

Jackson Ader: Got it. Thank you very much, guys.

Speaker #9: Thank you.

Eric Yuan: Thank you.

Eric Yuan: Thank you.

Speaker #1: Our next question comes from William Power with Baird.

Operator: Our next question comes from William Power with Baird.

Operator: Our next question comes from William Power with Baird.

Speaker #6: Okay, great. Thanks for taking the question. Eric, really encouraging to see continued progress on Zoom Phone, obviously the broader ARR growth trends. But I'm particularly interested in the Cisco displacements.

William Power: Hey, great. Thanks for taking the question. You know, Eric, really encouraging to see, you know, continued progress on Zoom Phone and obviously the broader, you know, ARR, you know, growth trends. I'm particularly interested in the, you know, the Cisco displacements. You know, I think historically, there's just been a lot of inertia with some of these legacy phone systems, especially the large enterprises have. I'm just kind of curious, is this just a function of working through the sales cycle? Is it a function of enterprises just becoming that much more comfortable with Zoom Phone quality? What's kind of putting you over top here? Maybe just to help us kind of understand the sustainability of some of these large opportunities.

William Power: Hey, great. Thanks for taking the question. You know, Eric, really encouraging to see, you know, continued progress on Zoom Phone and obviously the broader, you know, ARR, you know, growth trends. I'm particularly interested in the, you know, the Cisco displacements. You know, I think historically, there's just been a lot of inertia with some of these legacy phone systems, especially the large enterprises have. I'm just kind of curious, is this just a function of working through the sales cycle? Is it a function of enterprises just becoming that much more comfortable with Zoom Phone quality? What's kind of putting you over top here? Maybe just to help us kind of understand the sustainability of some of these large opportunities.

Speaker #6: I think, historically, there's just been a lot of inertia with some of these legacy phone systems, especially the large enterprises have. So I'm just kind of curious, is this just a function of working through the sales cycle?

Speaker #6: Is it a function of enterprises just becoming that much more comfortable with Zoom phone quality? What's kind of putting you over top here and maybe just help us kind of understand the sustainability of some of these large opportunities?

Speaker #11: Yeah. It's such a wonderful question. Believe it or not, actually, look at the total phone deployment a lot of, I think, probably still more than 50%.

Eric Yuan: Yeah, such a wonderful question. Believe it or not, actually, look at the total phone deployment. You know, I think probably still more than 50%, I did not get the, you know, the new number, still on-prem deployment. I mean, for a lot of the customer, right? They deploy the on-prem phone system for a long time, and say, Yeah, it's okay, it's not great, and why they want to, you know, hurry to migrate to the cloud, right? This kind of sort of a mentality before. Now, with AI, that's a strong reason for those of the very large enterprise customer, you know, they cannot leverage AI for the on-prem, right? That's why I would say that the we will be have a acceleration for those large enterprise customers to migrate away from on-prem to cloud.

Eric Yuan: Yeah, such a wonderful question. Believe it or not, actually, look at the total phone deployment. You know, I think probably still more than 50%, I did not get the, you know, the new number, still on-prem deployment. I mean, for a lot of the customer, right? They deploy the on-prem phone system for a long time, and say, Yeah, it's okay, it's not great, and why they want to, you know, hurry to migrate to the cloud, right? This kind of sort of a mentality before. Now, with AI, that's a strong reason for those of the very large enterprise customer, you know, they cannot leverage AI for the on-prem, right? That's why I would say that the we will be have a acceleration for those large enterprise customers to migrate away from on-prem to cloud.

Speaker #11: I did not get the new number. Still on-prem deployment. I mean, for a lot of customers, right? And they deployed the on-prem phone system for a long time.

Speaker #11: And so, yeah, it's okay. It's not great. And why do you want to hurry to migrate to the cloud, right? This kind of, sort of a mentality before.

Speaker #11: Now, with AI, that's a strong reason for those of the very large customers. They cannot leverage AI for on-prem, right? So that's why I would say that we'll be accelerating for those large enterprise customers to migrate away from on-prem to the cloud.

Speaker #11: Zoom is a much better position. We win quite a few very large, very competitive phone deployment for on-prem to the cloud. Again, AI is a driver.

Eric Yuan: Zoom is in much better position. You know, we win a quite a few very large, very competitive phone deployment for on-prem, you know, to the cloud. Again, AI is a driver, you know, and for those customers to migrate to the, you know, AI first, you know, cloud, you know, phone system. That's a, yeah, that's a driver.

Eric Yuan: Zoom is in much better position. You know, we win a quite a few very large, very competitive phone deployment for on-prem, you know, to the cloud. Again, AI is a driver, you know, and for those customers to migrate to the, you know, AI first, you know, cloud, you know, phone system. That's a, yeah, that's a driver.

Speaker #11: And for those customers to migrate to AI-first, cloud, phone system, and that's a—yeah, that's a driver.

Speaker #8: And maybe just to add the numbers to what Eric said, it's about 130-plus million seats in the cloud and about 150-ish on-prem. So Eric's spot on with the rough 50/50.

Michelle Chang: Maybe just to add the numbers to what Eric said, it's about 130 plus million seats in the cloud and about 150-ish, on-prem. Eric, spot on on the rough 50/50.

Michelle Chang: Maybe just to add the numbers to what Eric said, it's about 130 plus million seats in the cloud and about 150-ish, on-prem. Eric, spot on on the rough 50/50.

Speaker #6: So lots of opportunity.

William Power: Lots of opportunity?

William Power: Lots of opportunity?

Speaker #8: Yeah.

Michelle Chang: Yeah.

Michelle Chang: Yeah.

Speaker #9: Yeah, huge. Because if not because of the AI, it's hard to convince them. It's AI. It's okay. I use it for 20 years. It's okay.

Eric Yuan: Yeah, huge. If not because of AI, it's hard to convince them. They say, it's okay. I use it for 20 years. It, you know, it's okay. Now, you know, it's a great opportunity ahead of us. Thank you.

Eric Yuan: Yeah, huge. If not because of AI, it's hard to convince them. They say, it's okay. I use it for 20 years. It, you know, it's okay. Now, you know, it's a great opportunity ahead of us. Thank you.

Speaker #9: But now, it's a great opportunity ahead of us. Thank you.

Michelle Chang: Maybe the last thing that I'd mention is just increasingly how the deals reflect. It's not just phone alone as a workload, it's that sort of wanting that whole system of action. I think that's why you see so many contact center phone deals coming together. You know, as we think about large competitive displacements, I think the inability to kind of have that full portfolio is one of the reasons.

Michelle Chang: Maybe the last thing that I'd mention is just increasingly how the deals reflect. It's not just phone alone as a workload, it's that sort of wanting that whole system of action. I think that's why you see so many contact center phone deals coming together. You know, as we think about large competitive displacements, I think the inability to kind of have that full portfolio is one of the reasons.

Speaker #8: Maybe the last thing that I'd mention is just increasingly how the deals reflect it's not just phone alone as a workload. It's that sort of wanting that whole system of action.

Speaker #8: I think that's why you see so many contact center phone deals coming together. And so, as we think about large competitive displacements, I think the inability to kind of have that full portfolio is one of the reasons.

Speaker #6: Thank you. Thank you.

Eric Yuan: Thank you. Thank you.

Eric Yuan: Thank you. Thank you.

Speaker #1: Our last question for today comes from Katherine Trebnik with Rosenblatt Securities.

Operator: Our last question for today comes from Catharine Trebnick with Rosenblatt Securities.

Operator: Our last question for today comes from Catharine Trebnick with Rosenblatt Securities.

Speaker #10: Okay, thanks for speaking with me. Quick question on the channel. So, I get the fact that you go direct with the phone and the contact center, and you did mention systems.

Catharine Trebnick: Okay, thanks for sneaking me in. Quick question on the channel. I get the fact that you go direct with the phone and the contact center, and you did mention systems, and you did talk this quarter that you had many more deals that were bundled. Are you seeing a different buying pattern from the enterprise and the SMBs that are forcing you or maybe being more, or the system integrators are more attractive to you? Can you peel that back a bit for me? Thanks.

Catharine Trebnick: Okay, thanks for sneaking me in. Quick question on the channel. I get the fact that you go direct with the phone and the contact center, and you did mention systems, and you did talk this quarter that you had many more deals that were bundled. Are you seeing a different buying pattern from the enterprise and the SMBs that are forcing you or maybe being more, or the system integrators are more attractive to you? Can you peel that back a bit for me? Thanks.

Speaker #10: And you did talk this quarter that you had many more deals that were bundled. So, are you seeing a different buying pattern from the enterprise and the SMBs that are forcing you or maybe being more — or the system integrators are more attractive to you?

Speaker #10: Can you peel that back a bit for me? Thanks.

Michelle Chang: Your question, Catherine, is are we seeing, I mean...

Speaker #8: Your question, Katherine, is, are we seeing—I mean, I would say.

Michelle Chang: Your question, Catherine, is are we seeing, I mean...

Catharine Trebnick: What are you seeing? Yeah, it seems like you had more bundles this quarter than you have typically discussed. How is that changing your go-to-market motion and your working with the different partners? Because most of the partners typically just sell the phone or the contact center. It seems to me, if it's a more complex deal, that you're gonna need either direct sales force or more of a system integrator.

Catharine Trebnick: What are you seeing? Yeah, it seems like you had more bundles this quarter than you have typically discussed. How is that changing your go-to-market motion and your working with the different partners? Because most of the partners typically just sell the phone or the contact center. It seems to me, if it's a more complex deal, that you're gonna need either direct sales force or more of a system integrator.

Speaker #10: What are you seeing? Yeah. It seems like you had more bundles this quarter than you have typically discussed. So, how is that changing your go-to-market motion?

Speaker #10: And you're working with the different partners? Because most of the partners typically just sell the phone or the contact center. So it seems to me if it's a more complex deal, that you're going to need either direct Salesforce or more of a system integrator.

Speaker #8: Yeah. I mean, I would say what we saw in Q4 was just an intensification of the pattern that we've seen previously, which is just what a natural sale it is for phone and contact center to come together and then frequently that also comes with a meeting portfolio.

Michelle Chang: Yeah, I mean, I would say what we saw in Q4 was just an intensification of a pattern that we've seen previously, which is, you know, just what a natural sale it is for Phone and Contact Center to come together. Frequently, that also comes with a meetings portfolio. Look, you know, in a lot of the deals, did they also include other great Zoom products? Yes. I think it speaks to sort of where the market is going, that system of action that we talked about, also stitching the AI value in. Then certainly, Catherine, investments that you've noted in your stuff about investments in the channel.

Michelle Chang: Yeah, I mean, I would say what we saw in Q4 was just an intensification of a pattern that we've seen previously, which is, you know, just what a natural sale it is for Phone and Contact Center to come together. Frequently, that also comes with a meetings portfolio. Look, you know, in a lot of the deals, did they also include other great Zoom products? Yes. I think it speaks to sort of where the market is going, that system of action that we talked about, also stitching the AI value in. Then certainly, Catherine, investments that you've noted in your stuff about investments in the channel.

Speaker #8: And look, in a lot of the deals, did they also include other great Zoom products? Yes. I think it speaks to sort of where the market is going.

Speaker #8: That system of action that we talked about also stitching the AI value in. And then certainly, Katherine, investments that you've noted in your stuff about investments in the channel.

Speaker #10: Well, and the other part is, are you seeing the enterprise want to move more towards a platform, like they are in security, and that you're feeling you have enough product pieces now to be part of that platform play?

Catharine Trebnick: Well, the other part is, are you seeing the enterprise want to move more towards a platform like they are in security, and that you're feeling you have enough product pieces now to be part of that platform play?

Catharine Trebnick: Well, the other part is, are you seeing the enterprise want to move more towards a platform like they are in security, and that you're feeling you have enough product pieces now to be part of that platform play?

Speaker #8: Yeah. I mean, I'll jump in and then, Eric, you should certainly jump in as well. I do think, and you're seeing in a lot of those large deals, those platform things.

Michelle Chang: Yeah, I mean, I'll jump in, and then, Eric, you certainly jump in as well. I do think, and you're seeing in a lot of those large deals, those platform things, I don't think it means all of them. I don't think like anything there's a binary answer, but maybe just as a quick data point, like, if you look at our top 10 deals in Contact Center, six of 10 included phones. I think it's just an indicator that there is both those that really want that platform, that whole system of action stitched together with AI, and then there's others that are just gonna have, you know, their own technology and come at it in different ways.

Michelle Chang: Yeah, I mean, I'll jump in, and then, Eric, you certainly jump in as well. I do think, and you're seeing in a lot of those large deals, those platform things, I don't think it means all of them. I don't think like anything there's a binary answer, but maybe just as a quick data point, like, if you look at our top 10 deals in Contact Center, six of 10 included phones. I think it's just an indicator that there is both those that really want that platform, that whole system of action stitched together with AI, and then there's others that are just gonna have, you know, their own technology and come at it in different ways.

Speaker #8: I don't think it means all of them. I don't think anything there's a binary answer. But maybe just as a quick data point, if you look at our top 10 deals in contact center, 6 of 10 included phones.

Speaker #8: So I think it's just an indicator that there is both those that really want that platform, that whole system of action stitched together with AI, and then there's others that are just going to have their own technology and come at it in different ways.

Speaker #8: But look, I think maybe just to the third revenue conversation, I see that as a great sign. It's these all-in with Zoom large, longer-term deals.

Michelle Chang: look, I think, you know, maybe just to the deferred revenue conversation, I see that as a great sign. It sees all in with Zoom large, longer term deals. I think there's some really great things on the future for our contact center business.

Michelle Chang: look, I think, you know, maybe just to the deferred revenue conversation, I see that as a great sign. It sees all in with Zoom large, longer term deals. I think there's some really great things on the future for our contact center business.

Speaker #8: So I think there's some really great things on the future for our contact center business.

Speaker #11: Yeah, just a quick little add-on to what Michelle said. So the Zoom Workplace is our UCaaS—the platform. Contact Center is a CCaaS. It's specific for those large enterprise customers, right?

Eric Yuan: Just quickly to add on to what Michelle said. The Zoom Workplace is our UCaaS, you know, the platform. You know, contact center is the CCaaS, especially for those large enterprise customers, right? When they look at it from on-prem, you know, to cloud or maybe from the pre-AI solutions to AI solutions, if they can combine those two, consolidate those two systems into one platform, one vendor, why not? You know, this is a great ROI. That's the reason why quite often you see both UCaaS and CCaaS were winning together. That's a, that's a reason.

Eric Yuan: Just quickly to add on to what Michelle said. The Zoom Workplace is our UCaaS, you know, the platform. You know, contact center is the CCaaS, especially for those large enterprise customers, right? When they look at it from on-prem, you know, to cloud or maybe from the pre-AI solutions to AI solutions, if they can combine those two, consolidate those two systems into one platform, one vendor, why not? You know, this is a great ROI. That's the reason why quite often you see both UCaaS and CCaaS were winning together. That's a, that's a reason.

Speaker #11: When they look at it from on-prem to cloud, or maybe from the pre-AI solutions to AI solutions, if it can combine those two—consolidate those two systems into one platform, one vendor—why not?

Speaker #11: This is a great ROI. That's the reason why quite often you see both UCaaS and CCaaS winning together. So that's a reason.

Speaker #10: Thank you.

Catharine Trebnick: Thank you.

Catharine Trebnick: Thank you.

Speaker #11: Thank you.

Eric Yuan: Thank you.

Eric Yuan: Thank you.

Operator: Thank you. This concludes the Q&A portion of today's call. I'll now turn it back over to Eric for closing remarks.

Operator: Thank you. This concludes the Q&A portion of today's call. I'll now turn it back over to Eric for closing remarks.

Speaker #8: Thank you. This concludes the Q&A portion of today's call. I'll now turn it back over to Eric for closing remarks.

Eric Yuan: Thank you for Zoom employees, customers, partners, and our investors for your great support, and we truly appreciate. We're very optimistic about FY 2027, so see you next quarter. Thank you.

Eric Yuan: Thank you for Zoom employees, customers, partners, and our investors for your great support, and we truly appreciate. We're very optimistic about FY 2027, so see you next quarter. Thank you.

Speaker #11: Thank you to Zoom employees, customers, partners, and our investors for your greatest support. And we truly appreciate your being very, very optimistic about FY27. So, see you next quarter.

Speaker #11: Thank you.

Speaker #8: Take care.

Michelle Chang: Take care.

Michelle Chang: Take care.

Speaker #1: This concludes today's earnings call. Thank you all for attending and have a great rest of your day.

Operator: This concludes today's earnings call. Thank you all for attending, and have a great rest of your day.

Operator: This concludes today's earnings call. Thank you all for attending, and have a great rest of your day.

Speaker #11: Thank you all.

Eric Yuan: Thank you all.

Eric Yuan: Thank you all.

Michelle Chang: Goodbye.

Michelle Chang: Goodbye.

Q4 2026 Zoom Video Communications Inc Earnings Call

Demo

Zoom Video

Earnings

Q4 2026 Zoom Video Communications Inc Earnings Call

ZM

Wednesday, February 25th, 2026 at 10:00 PM

Transcript

No Transcript Available

No transcript data is available for this event yet. Transcripts typically become available shortly after an earnings call ends.

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