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Backblaze Inc. (BLZE) reported its third-quarter 2025 earnings, surprising analysts with an earnings per share (EPS) of $0.03, which exceeded the forecasted loss of $0.01. Despite this positive earnings surprise, the company’s stock fell 3.31% in the regular session and continued to decline 0.64% in pre-market trading. The company posted a revenue of $37.2 million, slightly above the anticipated $36.92 million, marking a 14% year-over-year increase.
Key Takeaways
- Backblaze achieved a significant EPS surprise, outperforming expectations by 400%.
- The stock declined despite the earnings beat, indicating mixed investor sentiment.
- Revenue growth was driven by a 28% increase in B2 Cloud Storage.
- Gross margin improved to 62%, up from 55% the previous year.
Company Performance
Backblaze reported robust growth in its B2 Cloud Storage division, which saw a 28% year-over-year increase, contributing significantly to the company’s overall 14% revenue growth. The company has been focusing on AI-related storage solutions, which now account for about 25% of new business. Backblaze’s competitive pricing strategy, offering storage at one-fifth the cost of traditional providers, continues to attract new clients, including those from AI sectors.
Financial Highlights
- Revenue: $37.2 million, up 14% year-over-year
- EPS: $0.03, compared to a forecasted loss of $0.01
- Gross margin: 62%, up from 55% last year
- Adjusted EBITDA margin: 23%, nearly double from 12% last year
- GAAP net loss: $3.8 million, a 70% improvement from the previous year
Earnings vs. Forecast
Backblaze’s actual EPS of $0.03 surpassed the forecasted loss of $0.01, resulting in a 400% surprise. This performance is a significant turnaround from previous quarters and highlights the company’s improving financial health.
Market Reaction
Despite the positive earnings surprise, Backblaze’s stock fell 3.31% in the regular session and an additional 0.64% in pre-market trading, closing at $9.28. This decline suggests investors may have concerns about the company’s future growth prospects or broader market conditions.
Outlook & Guidance
For the upcoming quarter, Backblaze expects revenue between $37.3 million and $37.9 million, with B2 Cloud Storage growth projected at 25-28% year-over-year. The company aims to achieve adjusted free cash flow positivity in Q4, focusing on improving sales execution and go-to-market strategies.
Executive Commentary
CEO Gleb Budman emphasized the importance of AI in the company’s strategy, stating, "AI is built on models, compute, and data." CFO Marc Suidan highlighted the company’s growth trajectory, saying, "We’re focused on building a company that delivers durable and profitable growth."
Risks and Challenges
- Market volatility could impact stock performance despite strong earnings.
- Competition from traditional cloud providers remains a threat.
- Economic uncertainties may affect client budgets and spending.
- Execution risks in the go-to-market transformation could affect growth.
- Dependence on AI sector growth, which could fluctuate.
Q&A
During the earnings call, analysts inquired about the variability in AI customer data usage and challenges in closing larger deals. The company addressed these concerns, focusing on enhancing self-serve and direct sales strategies to capture more market share in the AI and video storage sectors.
Full transcript - Backblaze Inc (BLZE) Q3 2025:
Tiffany, Conference Operator: Hello, and thank you for standing by. My name is Tiffany, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Backblaze Third Quarter 2025 earnings call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speaker’s remarks, there will be a question-and-answer session. If you would like to ask a question during that time, simply press star, then the number one on your telephone keypad. I would now like to turn the call over to Mimi Kong, Investor Relations. Mimi, please go ahead.
Mimi Kong, Investor Relations, Backblaze: Thank you. Good morning, and welcome to Backblaze’s Third Quarter 2025 earnings call. On the call with me today are Gleb Budman, co-founder, CEO, and chairperson of the board, and Marc Suidan, chief financial officer. Today, Backblaze will discuss the financial results that were distributed earlier. Statements on this call include forward-looking statements about our future financial results, the impact of our go-to-market transformation, sales and marketing initiatives, cost-saving initiatives, results from new features, our ability to compete effectively and manage our growth, our strategy to acquire new customers, retain and expand our business with existing customers, and the impact of previous price changes. These statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially, including those described in our risk factors that are included in our quarterly report on Form 10Q and our other financial filings.
You should not rely on our forward-looking statements as predictions of future events. All forward-looking statements that we make on this call are based on assumptions and beliefs as of today, and we undertake no obligation to update them except as required by law. Our discussion today will include non-GAAP financial measures. These non-GAAP measures should be considered in addition to, and not as a substitute for, our GAAP results. Reconciliation of GAAP to non-GAAP results may be found in our earnings release, which is furnished with our Form 8K filed today with the SEC. You can also find a slide presentation related to our comments in the webcast, which will also be posted to our Investor Relations page after the call. Please also see our press release or presentation for definitions of additional metrics such as NRR, gross customer retention rate, and adjusted free cash flows.
Finally, we will be in New York to participate in the Craig-Hallum Alpha Select Conference on November 18 and the Needham Tech Week one-on-one event on November 20. Thank you for joining us, and I would now like to turn the call over to Gleb.
Gleb Budman, Co-founder, CEO, Chairperson, Backblaze: Thank you, Mimi, and welcome everyone to the call. We delivered strong results this quarter. In Q3, revenue and adjusted EBITDA margin both came in above the high end of guidance, and we continue to be on track to be adjusted free cash flow positive in Q4. Overall, company revenue grew 14% year over year, and B2 Cloud Storage delivered strong results, growing 28%. Now, I’d like to take a step back and share how we see the AI industry evolving because AI is becoming central to both our customers and our opportunity ahead. AI is built on models, compute, and data. While just a couple of years ago, models were the domain of only a few large providers, today they are widely available with literally millions of open-source options. So models are no longer a bottleneck for AI innovation. The next component of AI is compute.
The GPUs that make up compute have become increasingly available, but access at scale remains challenging, and the market has also become quite fragmented with approximately 200 Neo Clouds such as CoreWeave and Nebius offering GPU capacity for rent. That brings us to data, the key differentiator for AI success and where Backblaze helps companies win. Data sizes are exploding as AI expands beyond text to images, audio, and video, driving massive storage and performance needs. The teams leading in AI aren’t just the ones with the most data; they’re also the ones who can aggregate, clean, and organize it for today’s workloads, move it to whichever Neo Cloud they choose, all while preparing it for tomorrow’s architectures.
Backblaze has already built one of the largest, fastest, and most cost-effective storage clouds on the planet, offering throughput of up to 1 terabit per second and priced at about one-fifth that of traditional cloud offerings. Add to that our free egress and universal data migration that allow customers to easily move their data from other cloud providers where they may feel locked in and then freely send their data to one of the 200 Neo clouds or anywhere else they need it to go. Layer on our team actively supporting customer success, and it becomes clearer why hundreds of AI companies are choosing Backblaze. Highlighting this, Backblaze recently received industry recognition in both cloud security and technology innovation, including an award for B2 Overdrive. These honors reflect the strength of our technology and the pace of our innovation.
Now, let me share a few customer examples that bring this to life. This past quarter, we signed a new six-figure deal with an AI startup focused on large-scale vision language models. The team was small but scaling rapidly and racing to finish key projects. They could not predict how their data volumes might grow and needed a high-performance and cost-effective solution that could scale with them. They started self-serve and later engaged our sales team to access even higher performance. B2 Overdrive gave them the performance they needed, and our team made it easy, freeing them up to focus on their critical projects. Another AI customer in the surveillance space expanded their commitment by almost 10x to a seven-figure TCV deal. We won this customer away from a hyperscaler whose platform limited how they could automate their workflow. Our platform offers a valuable multi-cloud upload that streamlined their workflows.
They expanded their commitment with us because we offered a predictable and cost-effective way to scale easily. Finally, we had another six-figure win, a Powered By Backblaze white-label deal with an app developer in the media space. This was another competitive win from a hyperscaler. The customer was growing fast and needed storage that could support millions of users. After being hit with a surprise roughly $100,000 charge for moving data with the hyperscaler, they came to Backblaze for predictable pricing and scale. Backblaze is now their storage platform, and they will join our 100,000 customers who collectively serve hundreds of millions of end users through our platform. Across all these examples, the reasons customers choose Backblaze are consistent. Performance that rivals the biggest clouds, predictable and fair pricing, and people who make it easy to get things done.
Whether it’s a startup training models, a media team moving petabytes, or an enterprise scaling to millions of users, the story is the same. Faster, simpler, more affordable, and supported by a team that actually helps. Now, I’ll share how we see our growth opportunity. In Q3, we grew B2 28%. And for Q4, we now expect B2 to grow in the range of 25%-28% year over year. We’re proud of our growth, but this is below the 30% target we set for ourselves at the beginning of the year. To help reach our growth goals, we’re launching phase two of our go-to-market transformation focused on accelerating the velocity of both our self-serve and direct sales motions. For self-serve, we’re proud of the consistent growth engine we’ve built.
Now, we’re going to scale it by making it more frictionless for data-heavy AI use cases and by kicking off robust developer relations. These steps are aimed to deepen our connection with the developer community and make it even easier to adopt our platform. For direct sales, we’re building on the progress we’ve made over the past year. We’re adding talent and upgrading our core systems in order to better target customers and improve sales efficiency. To accelerate this, we’re also partnering with advisors and a consulting team who has helped both Snowflake and Databricks in their go-to-market execution. We’re reinforcing our sales and marketing engine and remain confident in our ability to deliver consistent, durable growth over time. With that, I’ll turn it over to Marc to take us through the financials. Marc. Thank you, Gleb, and good morning, everyone.
We delivered a strong third quarter with results coming in above the high end of our guidance for both revenue and adjusted EBITDA. We have solidified our balance sheet, improved our path to be free cash flow positive, and accelerated revenue growth. We’re focused on getting B2 to a rule of 40, and we are on track to roughly triple our score this year. Now, let me walk you through the details of the quarter. Starting with revenue. Total revenue exceeded expectations. It came in at $37.2 million compared to the high end of guidance, which was $37.1 million. This represents a 14% year-over-year overall growth. B2 grew 28% year over year compared to the organic growth of 19%. In the same period last year. This represents an acceleration of about 900 basis points this quarter. This improvement was driven by the first phase of our go-to-market transformation.
As mentioned last quarter, usage from one of our larger AI customers has been variable as the customer’s data storage needs have fluctuated for their business. Overall, industry-wide demand for data storage is expected to grow rapidly, and our platform is well-positioned to support those expanding needs. We’re also seeing diversification within B2 across our core use cases, which are live application hot storage, backup, media, and AI-related workloads. In Computer Backup, revenue was flat year over year, reflecting the final rolloff of the price increase implemented in 2023. Turning to net revenue retention. Overall, the trailing four-quarter company NRR for Q3 was 106% compared to 109% in the second quarter. Going forward, we believe it’s clear to show in-quarter NRR versus the previously reported trailing four-quarter average.
As an example for Q3, in-quarter NRR for B2 improved to 116% from 109% in Q2, and this was driven by a large AI customer we discussed last quarter. You can see that dynamic on slide 11 of the earnings presentation. Moving on to gross margin. It was 62%, up from 55% a year ago, reflecting operating leverage and the benefit from our recent useful life study. Adjusted gross margin was 79% compared to 78% last year. Overall, margin performance remained stable. Data center costs are generally rising. However, they are being offset by scale and labor, greater code efficiency, and lower amortized R&D as a percentage of revenue. Operating expenses were 71% of revenue, an improvement from 92% a year ago. This reflects the structural changes that we made last year through our restructuring and zero-based budgeting process.
R&D spending held steady in dollars but declined as a percentage of revenue from 33% a year ago to 30% this quarter. When you combine the R&D expense and capitalized R&D, the improvement is even more pronounced at 35% of revenue, down from 43% a year ago. Sales and marketing came in at 24% of revenue, down from 36% a year ago. We’re focused on improving efficiency in our go-to-market model, including reallocating funds to strengthen our top-of-funnel programs and investing in operational go-to-market talent, all while maintaining the same cost discipline you’ve seen from us over the past year. G&A was 17% of revenue, down from 23% last year. We continue to drive efficiencies across our corporate functions and general administrative spend. Operating results. GAAP net loss was $3.8 million, a 70% improvement from a loss of $12.8 million in the prior year.
On a non-GAAP basis, net income was $1.9 million compared to a loss of $4.1 million last year. Adjusted EBITDA margin reached 23%, almost double the 12% from a year ago, and a quarter ahead of our outlook. That performance reflects continued financial discipline and the operating leverage we’ve built into the model. We’re focused on building a company that delivers durable and profitable growth. In Q3, adjusted free cash flow was negative $3.5 million, improving by roughly $500,000 year over year. As we discussed last quarter, we used $2.5 million of our line of credit to fund capital expenditures outside of the U.S. so we can cut our international borrowing rate in half. Balance sheet. We ended the quarter with $50 million in cash and marketable securities, largely unchanged from last quarter.
We believe the balance sheet remains strong and provides flexibility to support continued growth and investment. As we announced last quarter, we initiated a modest share repurchase program. In Q3, we repurchased $1.2 million of shares as part of our ongoing work to manage equity dilution. Guidance. For the fourth quarter, we expect revenue in the range of $37.3 million-$37.9 million. We’re slightly widening this range to account for the variability we see in certain large customers. B2 growth in Q4 is expected to be between 25% and 28%. We continue to focus on driving operating leverage and remain on track to be adjusted free cash flow positive in Q4. To close, our financial transformation is progressing well. We’re reducing equity dilution through our repurchase program. On track to achieve positive adjusted free cash flow in Q4 and continuing to build operating leverage towards GAAP profitability.
While we haven’t yet reached our 30% B2 growth goal, we expect the next phase of our go-to-market transformation to drive stronger growth. Together, these efforts are building a stronger, more efficient company. One that’s on path towards operating at a rule of 40 profile. Just looking at B2, we started the year with a rule of 40 score of 9 and are on track to roughly tripling that in Q4 of this year. Operator, please open it up for questions.
Tiffany, Conference Operator: At this time, if you would like to ask a question, press star, then the number one on your telephone keypad. To withdraw your question, simply press star one again. We kindly ask that you limit your questions to one and one follow-up for today’s call. We will pause for just a moment to compile the Q&A roster. Your first question comes from the line of Jeff Van Rhee with Craig-Hallum Capital Group. Please go ahead.
Jeff Van Rhee, Analyst, Craig-Hallum Capital Group: Great. Thanks. Thanks, guys. Thanks for taking the questions. Just a couple here. In terms of the sales evolution in phase two, talk to me about how you were envisioning the sales sort of evolution. I think you commented last quarter that most reps were more than halfway through their ramp. Are the existing reps ramping the way you had expected, or was there something you experienced in the sales process that led to you sort of implementing the second phase?
Gleb Budman, Co-founder, CEO, Chairperson, Backblaze: Hey, Jeff. This is Gleb. Thank you for the question.
Jeff Van Rhee, Analyst, Craig-Hallum Capital Group: Thanks, Gleb.
Gleb Budman, Co-founder, CEO, Chairperson, Backblaze: What I would say is that in the first phase, one of the things we talked about was that our goal was to move up market. You could see that we’ve definitely moved up market with the multiple six and seven-figure deals that we’ve consistently announced over the year. Phase two for us is about driving the execution velocity. It is a slightly different focus. We want to continue to move up market and support those larger deals, but we’re spending more time focusing on moving things through the funnel more explicitly and more actively. In terms of the reps themselves, most of the reps were hired at the beginning of the year or earlier, so they are largely through their ramps as part of their onboarding.
Jeff Van Rhee, Analyst, Craig-Hallum Capital Group: Okay. And just revisit, if you would, on the B2. You had the 30% goal for Q4. I heard a little bit of commentary there, but just to expand on that a bit more, what specifically was it that you thought was going to play out that did not play out, and when do we get to that 30% plus?
Gleb Budman, Co-founder, CEO, Chairperson, Backblaze: From our last earnings call, basically, two things happened. One is we had a large customer that we talked about in the prior call that in Q2, the outperformance was in part driven by the variability of a large AI customer. As we look toward Q4, the variability in part is driven by this same large customer trimming more than we expected. The other thing that drove that is just the larger deals, as we move up market, a number of them have taken longer to execute. The combination of those two things have changed our expectations for Q3 somewhat. That is why we are doing phase two of the GTM transformation. We love that we have been able to move up market. It has proven that the platform supports these larger customers. It supports these larger use cases. We also want to have more core predictability in the business.
It’s interesting because before, we used to have lots and lots of small deals. Having lots and lots of small deals provided really great predictability, and we were able to go public on lots of $300 and $2,000-type deals. The challenge with those was it was harder to significantly outperform, significantly rapidly accelerate growth. The bigger deals in moving up market allow us to do that, but we want to focus on increasing that core base of smaller deals to drive that consistency also.
Jeff Van Rhee, Analyst, Craig-Hallum Capital Group: One last quick one, if I could, on the data variability. Gleb, you’ve mentioned several times in the call. Just talk about how that variability is maybe different than what you had expected from these customers, obviously, as you’re getting AI workloads, some new experiences here as to how people are going to use you both in that moment as well as over time. Just a bit more about the variability on the data usage would be helpful. Thanks.
Gleb Budman, Co-founder, CEO, Chairperson, Backblaze: Yeah. The AI use cases are obviously all evolving very rapidly, and we’re trying to support the customers where they are. The different use cases that we see across AI are things that we are supporting and learning along with the customers. This particular customer that we talked about, as their business goes up and down in terms of their needs for their data, we support them with that. The way that we work with customers is many of our customers are pay-as-you-go. They enter a credit card, and they just sign up and go. Some of our customers we sign contractual commitments with, and for a number of the contractual commitments, they’ll often sign a contractual commitment and then have the ability to scale up above that.
With some of these larger AI customers, they’ll sign a contractual commit, and then they’ll ramp up even faster than that because their business is growing faster than they expected, and then sometimes they need to do some pullback. That’s what we’re seeing with some of these. The nice thing, obviously, is we have 100,000 customers on B2. We’re distributed across a variety of use cases. It’s not all variable AI customers. We still have a lot of core predictability in our business, but we do want to lean in with the AI use cases because we do see that that is transformative for the industry and where we see a lot of opportunity ahead.
Jeff Van Rhee, Analyst, Craig-Hallum Capital Group: Got it. Thanks so much.
Gleb Budman, Co-founder, CEO, Chairperson, Backblaze: Thanks, Jeff.
Tiffany, Conference Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Eric Martinuzzi with Lake Street Capital Markets. Please go ahead.
Eric Martinuzzi, Analyst, Lake Street Capital Markets: Yeah. I’d like to touch on—I know you haven’t given a guide for 2026, but I just wanted to learn your expectations for the two sides of the business going forward. Obviously, we’ve got good growth, but not the 30% you wanted in B2. And then we were flat here in Q3 on the CBU as we got through the last of the price increases. To put it in broad strokes, we’re looking at a year in 2025 where combined we’re at about 14% growth. I know I’m looking for that 14% growth to persist into 2026. What are you thinking about for a longer-term growth rate for B2 and CBU?
Marc Suidan, Chief Financial Officer, Backblaze: Yeah. Hi, Eric. Good morning. This is Marc. The 2025 for B2 is on track to be in that mid-20s year-over-year growth rate. 2026, we do not want to give guidance yet, but we feel pretty comfortable it is going to be in that range given what we are seeing now as well as that second phase of that go-to-market transformation. Those larger deals Gleb spoke about, if those come in, I mean, it could bring that number higher when they come in in those specific quarters. On the Computer Backup, just like we said last time, it would be low to mid-single digits, the contraction of that business. We are obviously taking action to try to stabilize that. We probably need more time to come back and report a different outlook there. For now, those are the right assumptions for B2 and Computer Backup.
Eric Martinuzzi, Analyst, Lake Street Capital Markets: Okay. The restructuring that you announced this morning as well, just curious to know. Where are we? You talked about some facilities, but it also talked about severance. Where are we cutting back on the headcount that we had versus the end of September?
Marc Suidan, Chief Financial Officer, Backblaze: Yeah. Listen, that is how we’re funding that next phase of our go-to-market transformation. Gleb talked about needing that mid-market, high-velocity deal volume to improve. It’s done really well over the past year, but we think it should be way better than where it is. That’s the key formula to get to that 30%. A lot of that restructuring cost is to transform our go-to-market practices. It’s to bring new talent on board. We have started that. It’s a lot more around getting talent that’s a lot more operational in their go-to-market skills, know how to use the technology, the data science behind it. I would say it’s more of a reinvestment versus a cost-cutting exercise.
Eric Martinuzzi, Analyst, Lake Street Capital Markets: Got it. Thanks for taking my questions.
Tiffany, Conference Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Etai Kiedron with Oppenheimer. Please go ahead.
Nolan Genevine, Analyst, Oppenheimer: Hi. This is Nolan Genevine on for Etai. Thanks for taking my questions. First, I just want to sort of double-click on these seven-figure customers. You’re clearly showing traction in selling to enterprises now, and you’ve added yet another seven-figure customer this quarter. How many seven-figure ARR customers do you have now? How has their expansion dynamics evolved in recent quarters versus sort of the smaller cohort? I have a follow-up. Thanks.
Gleb Budman, Co-founder, CEO, Chairperson, Backblaze: Hey, Nolan. Thanks for joining us, and thanks for the questions. One clarification I would say is we have these seven-figure deals. The interesting thing is they’re not all enterprises. They’re heavy users of data. Right? One of the things that we’ve seen is that customers are generating large volumes of data and needing high performance for those data sets. Like the AI-powered video surveillance customer that I mentioned, they’re not an enterprise company, but they’re a seven-figure deal. That actually, I think, bodes well for us for the future because these smaller mid-market companies that have high data needs are generally faster moving than the traditional enterprises, and there’s more of them out there. That’s one thing I would just say in terms of outlook and opportunity for us. In terms of the number of them, we’ve generally announced one or two.
Per quarter over the last year. It is not a large number of these seven-figure deals, but considering that in our first roughly 15 years of the company, we signed one, and in the last year, we have highlighted at least one a quarter, I think it is a great proof point to say that when we said we were moving up market, we moved up market.
Marc Suidan, Chief Financial Officer, Backblaze: Yeah. And you know what I’ll add, Nolan, is last quarter, we shared the number of customers with $50,000-plus ARR. It was up in Q2 30% year-over-year. In Q3, it was up 41%. So we’re maintaining good momentum on that front as well.
Nolan Genevine, Analyst, Oppenheimer: Got it. That is very helpful. I know you are not giving 2026 guidance. How should we think about the potential catalysts heading into the next fiscal year? Things like Overdrive ramping, this sort of phase two of the go-to-market transformation. Could you just maybe put a finer point on what you think could maybe drive upside or downside, just to the sort of current growth rate? Thank you.
Gleb Budman, Co-founder, CEO, Chairperson, Backblaze: Yeah. It’s a good question. The go-to-market transformation phase two is certainly something that we’re leaning into heavily. Right? We’re putting a lot of focus on there in terms of talent, system upgrades, leveraging advisors, and the consulting team. We believe that there’s a lot of opportunity in driving the ability and execution for us to get to market faster with the products that we have. In terms of B2 Overdrive, we announced that deal. We announced that product line fairly recently. We’ve already closed multiple six-figure deals on there, which is, I think, a great sign that it has product-market fit. We believe it’s the highest throughput per dollar offering on the market. That’s a great fit for customers that really need that performance.
One of the other things that we’ve seen on Overdrive, which has been interesting, is we’ve seen customers come to us because of Overdrive. They’d heard about Overdrive. They’d heard about the performance availability, and they came to us for that. When they showed up, they realized that our B2 standard offering is actually quite a high-performance offering, and it was sufficient for them. I think it’s changed some of the perception around what we offer. Even customers that aren’t signing up for Overdrive are often coming to us with these higher performance needs, which is a great direction for us as we become a more strategic partner for them. Overdrive provides up to 1 terabit per second of throughput. It is a blistering fast offering for them.
I do think that the GTM transformation is the thing that we look at as key, the Overdrive offering. The other thing that I would just mention is I do not want to undersell the phase one transformation that we did. Right? The phase one transformation was all about moving up market, and that is continuing to be an important catalyst for us, including for 2026. Mark mentioned that the big deals are something that can accelerate us even further, and that is something that we are excited about. The last thing I just mentioned is that the GTM phase one transformation, I mean, it doubled pipelines, it doubled bookings, it doubled channels. It did help quite a bit, and we are excited for phase two of that.
Nolan Genevine, Analyst, Oppenheimer: Got it. Thank you so much.
Tiffany, Conference Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Simon Leopold with Raymond James. Please go ahead.
Nolan Genevine, Analyst, Oppenheimer: Thank you very much. I wanted to ask about this phase two initiative in that I do not imagine there are free lunches. I have to assume that there is some investment involved. I know earlier you talked about sort of reallocating, but if we think about it, your sales and marketing has been running between roughly 21% and 23% of revenue. What are you budgeting for next year? How should we think about either a dollar basis or percent of revenue basis, but some metrics to try to get an understanding of what investment you are making for this phase two initiative?
Marc Suidan, Chief Financial Officer, Backblaze: Yeah. Hi, Simon. Good morning. It’s Marc. The percentage of revenue for sales and marketing should stay stable as a percent of revenue. The funding is going twofold. The restructuring allows us to fund the one-time cost. That’s not in that percent of revenue. That allows us to drive the transformation work, which is really rejigger all our go-to-market systems to make them work better together, cleanse the underlying data, and drive that data science capability I was talking about. The talent refresh we’re doing is within existing OPEX budget. Right? As one of you highlighted earlier, yes, there are severance costs that are one-time charges that fit into the restructuring, but on a recurring basis, when we finish this as a percentage of revenue, it should be pretty stable.
Nolan Genevine, Analyst, Oppenheimer: Great. In terms of the outlook for B2, slight downtick, nothing to be embarrassed about, high 20% growth. What changed in your mind versus your expectations when you set the goal? What’s different?
Marc Suidan, Chief Financial Officer, Backblaze: We set the goal all the way back when we launched our first phase of that transformation, which was exactly a year ago. That was a while back. That is our aim. Frankly, it remains our aim. Our phase one, as Gleb said, delivered. Doubled our pipelines, doubled our bookings, doubled our channel business. What we noticed, candidly, is our inbound motion is really strong. Right? We addressed a lot of our technical marketing content, our blogging. We started doing more events and webinars, and all that really improved our inbounds. I mean, our inbounds are up substantially. The inbound pipeline is up 100% year-over-year. Our outbound motion is newer to the company. That muscle is newer. That is the muscle we are working on fixing now in this next phase of this transformation.
It’s, unfortunately, one of these things that until you get into it, you don’t know how much you don’t know. We’re realizing it’s a muscle that needs to be a lot stronger to make it successful. We’re hard charging at it now. Our aim is when we do our Q4 earnings release in February, to give a lot more details around what makes up that phase two go-to-market transformation, when you should expect a change in the outcome from it, an improvement, and how that would address the year-over-year B2 revenue growth.
Nolan Genevine, Analyst, Oppenheimer: Great. Thank you for taking the questions.
Tiffany, Conference Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Zachary Cummins with B. Riley Securities. Please go ahead.
Zachary Cummins, Analyst, B. Riley Securities: Hi. Good morning. Thanks for taking my questions. Gleb or Marc, either one. I was wondering if you could give a little more context around some of the larger deals in the pipeline. It sounds like maybe those were pushing a little to the right when it came to the B2 side of the business. Any additional context around just the pipeline that you’re seeing with some of these larger deals and maybe the reason that some of them push to the right?
Gleb Budman, Co-founder, CEO, Chairperson, Backblaze: Yeah. Thanks, Zach, for the question. One thing I’ll say is when I looked at some of the deals and dug into it with Jason on the sales side, frankly, there wasn’t any pattern in them. They were kind of random reasons. A signer got sick. A different project internally came up that had to take priority, etc. There wasn’t any kind of clear pattern for why, but it just spoke to us about that. In the small deals, a lot of times what happens is it’s one person who is the person that’s interested, the decider, the buyer, the purchaser, the user, and they go and they make a decision and they go. In these larger deals, it’s just more complex. You have a buying committee. You have the various different, oftentimes security compliance reviews. There’s sometimes different departments that need to be involved for.
How it’s going to get used, how the migration is going to happen, etc. It is just one where, as we’re moving up market, we’re closing these bigger deals, and that’s fantastic. At the same time, we want to be realistic about that some of them take longer than I think we were seeing. We also have seen some large deals close very quickly. The B2 Overdrive deal at the beginning, the first one that we announced last quarter, closed incredibly quickly. Some of the customers that I talked about in my prepared remarks, when I was looking at them, there are six-figure deals that from start to finish were three months. That is quite quick for a six-figure deal from the first conversation to fully onboard it. We are also realizing that not all deals move that quickly.
Zachary Cummins, Analyst, B. Riley Securities: Understood. In terms of the phase two of the transformation, I’m sure we’ll get much more detail in your Q4 earnings call. Can you give us a sense of some of the things you’re looking to improve within the self-serve motion? Is this largely targeted towards some of these faster-moving, higher data usage customers and reducing the friction there? Anything you can provide there would be helpful.
Gleb Budman, Co-founder, CEO, Chairperson, Backblaze: Yeah. It’s interesting because we built the company basically on the self-serve motion. Right? When we went public, almost the entire business was driven by self-serve. We had a very, very nascent sales motion at the time. The great thing was that we built a blog that a few million people a year would read that drove a lot of inbound interest into the company. We had people be able to sign up, enter their email address, enter a password, and go, and then try it, and then get a credit card and sign up. As we moved up market, we had said concretely at the beginning of the year that our focus was going to be on that upmarket move, and we were not going to be doing a lot to change the self-serve motion. At the same time, our team was focused on.
That the whole SEO world was changing. Right? With the way that companies and individuals were searching was changing and moving to AI. Use cases where people would look on ChatGPT or Anthropic or whatever to find information. They actually leaned in on making sure all the content was updated and positioned well to be read by these applications. One of the things we saw was that our self-serve account creation was actually up 56%. As you look to a lot of the companies out there for whom their self-serve or driven by inbound type content, a lot of them were down quite a bit because they had not adjusted to the new AI chat type of search algorithms. The team leaned in and supported that quite well. Going forward in this phase two, one of the things that we are doing is really focusing on how.
These new AI-native startups and developers build themselves and ensuring that we’re well integrated through the whole lifecycle of those workflows and making sure that it’s really easy for them to learn about it and then adopt the platform. It’s a lot of work in terms of making sure that the content, the guides, but also the flows and the integrations are all there to support those data-heavy use cases. One thing I’ll mention is one of the customers I gave on the call. They came in as self-serve. They started just by themselves. As they wanted even higher performance, even larger deals, they requested to reach out to the sales team, and they had a conversation with us, and then they bought B2 Overdrive. That’s a motion that we love to see.
Zachary Cummins, Analyst, B. Riley Securities: Understood. Thanks for taking my questions and best of luck with the rest of the quarter.
Gleb Budman, Co-founder, CEO, Chairperson, Backblaze: Thanks, Zach.
Tiffany, Conference Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Mike Ticos with Needham. Please go ahead.
Jeff Hopson, Analyst, Needham: Hi. This is Jeff Hopson on for Mike Ticos. Thanks for the question, guys. I just wanted to see if there was any more info on how the Powered By. White Label solution is going. Obviously, Neo Clouds is becoming a more popular trend. It seems like that could be a good place for that or any sort of partnership to offer their customers more flexibility. Maybe just any info on that opportunity.
Gleb Budman, Co-founder, CEO, Chairperson, Backblaze: Yeah. Thanks, Jeff. Good to have you on. We’re actually pretty excited by the Powered By. As you saw in my prepared remarks, one of our largest deals this quarter was a Powered By deal. We also have seen some of our channel partners actually adopting Powered By, where instead of trying to resell and integrate at the customer level, they actually build it into their own offering and offer it directly. Like you said with the Neo Clouds, we have various discussions that are in progress around that. It’s certainly an exciting opportunity. There’s about 200 of them out there. They all have GPUs, and they all have storage needs.
We engage with them today in a variety of ways where we service our customers using the Neo Clouds by providing this open platform, free egress, high throughput, but also are in conversations with some of them to help them with their storage needs directly.
Jeff Hopson, Analyst, Needham: Perfect. Thank you for that. Maybe hardware storage has been on the top of investors’ minds recently as AI video generation comes into the forefront. I know you guys called out some AI video wins with customers. Just curious if you’re seeing an actual uptick in AI video companies just in the past six to nine months as those models have become more popular.
Gleb Budman, Co-founder, CEO, Chairperson, Backblaze: Can you repeat the very first part of the question? Did you say hardware storage?
Jeff Hopson, Analyst, Needham: Yeah. We’ve seen in the market hardware storage has become, yeah.
Gleb Budman, Co-founder, CEO, Chairperson, Backblaze: Yeah. So. Initially, AI was all about text. Right? It was generative AI for text. Then it became generative AI for images, then audio, and now video. Obviously, each of those is in the order of magnitude bigger in terms of the data sizes. Video is a very data-heavy file format. We absolutely are seeing customers signing up for that. I was looking. We had one of the interesting AI, Gen AI video companies was a recent customer this quarter. There was another large one the prior quarter. We have hundreds and hundreds of AI companies. Obviously, I do not know all of them, but just as they come up, I periodically see ones that catch my attention. It is something where they create models for the video that requires a lot of data on the front end.
It requires the data to generally get sent to one of the Neo Clouds providers for the model creation. The inferencing itself, where they’re generating the video, that video needs to go somewhere. We’re supporting customers on the various fronts. One thing I’ll tell you is that AI in general is a space that we’re seeing significant adoption. Today, about a quarter of all of our new business is coming from AI companies. Over time, it’s going to become harder to say what is an AI company and what is just a company using AI. Today, about a quarter of that new business is actually coming from companies that are specifically in the AI space. It’s an area that we’re excited to lean into.
Jeff Hopson, Analyst, Needham: Perfect. Thank you.
Tiffany, Conference Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Rustam Kenga with Citizens. Please go ahead.
Rustam Kenga, Analyst, Citizens: Gleb, Marc, Mimi, thanks for taking my questions. Great to see the outperformance and new high watermark on the net income and adjusted EBITDA there. Marc, given your prepared remarks, it sounds like there is going to be a lot more honing in on the operational go-to-market skills in phase two. Given the success from phase one moving up market, getting these larger deals, perhaps you have some better picture on the talent most equipped for what you are looking for in phase two. Is that reps with a prior focus on cloud computing and storage or more well-versed in, for lack of a better term, the language of AI? Ultimately, any insights you can share on what kind of reps have been the most successful on the direct sales front and that you might be looking to replicate in phase two. Thanks.
Gleb Budman, Co-founder, CEO, Chairperson, Backblaze: All right. This is actually Gleb. I’ll start, and then Marc can join in if he wants to add as well. First of all, what I’ll say is in terms of talent, a lot of the talent is actually on the systems and operational side of it. We’re looking for a top-tier RevOps person. The consulting firm that we’re working with, we’re doing a large project around both the systems transformation as well as the sales enablement and execution side. Marc mentioned that we have a success with inbound. At the same time, what we see is there’s a lot of stuff that comes at the very top of the funnel, and then there’s a lot of opportunity to be more efficient and effective in having it go through the funnel. Then on the outbound side of it.
One of the things that we’ve realized is that we can do better with targeting the right types of customers who are our ideal customer profiles, both in terms of identifying them and also in terms of how we reach out to them. A lot of the work in the transformation isn’t even specifically about the different reps. It’s about the infrastructure of people and systems around the reps to help them.
Eric Martinuzzi, Analyst, Lake Street Capital Markets: Yeah. I mean, Rust, this is Marc. Our reps have done well. Our win rate is 30% from opportunity to close, which is a very healthy win rate. We just want to be flowing more opportunities through that team. As that opportunity flows through that team, we start expanding capacity and optimizing capacity within. As Gleb said, there is a lot more around making things available to every stage of the process in a way where people are following up at the right time, they got the right content, the right messaging. The multimodal approach to the customer when you place advertising versus email versus text message. There is just an incredibly scientific way of doing that these days. I mean, the people helping us are people who help companies like Snowflake and Databricks. They bring the best in class on that process. We.
Want to adopt it and drive a lot more volume through there.
Rustam Kenga, Analyst, Citizens: Super helpful. That makes a lot of sense. Thanks, guys.
Gleb Budman, Co-founder, CEO, Chairperson, Backblaze: Thank you.
Tiffany, Conference Operator: That concludes our question and answer session. I will now turn the call back over to Gleb Budman for closing remarks.
Gleb Budman, Co-founder, CEO, Chairperson, Backblaze: Thank you, everyone, for joining us. With a double beat this quarter and how well we’re positioned to help companies with AI workloads, we’re enthusiastic about our opportunity ahead. I want to thank our employees, our customers, our partners, our investors for being on this journey with us as we build this core storage backbone of the internet. For our investors, we’ll look forward to seeing you at the Needham Conference and at the Craig-Hallum Conferences this month and chatting with all of you next quarter. Thank you.
Tiffany, Conference Operator: Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today’s call. Thank you all for joining. You may now disconnect.
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