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Breaking Analysis: UiPath’s Unconventional $PATH to IPO

UiPath is going public this coming week and will be the next hot software company to IPO. It has had a long strange trip to IPO. How so you ask? Well, the company was started in 2005 but its culture is akin to a frenetic startup. The firm shunned conventions and instead of focusing on a narrow geographic area to prove its product/market fit before it started to grow, it aggressively launched international operations well prior to reaching unicorn status. Today, more than 60% of UiPath’s business is outside of the United States, despite its New York headquarters. There’s more. According to recent SEC filings, UiPath’s total revenues grew 81% last year…but its free cash flow is modestly positive. That’s rare. 

Wait, there’s even more. The company raised $750M in a Series F in early February at a whopping $35B valuation. Yet the implied valuation based on the most recent SEC filings yields a valuation of just under $26B. It’s a good bet that artificial ceiling will be shattered. 

In this week’s Breaking Analysis, we’ll share our learnings from sifting through hundreds of pages of UiPath’s S1 and convey our thoughts on its market, competitive position and outlook. And, as is our model, we’ll back up these observations with data from ETR

What’s the Best Path to Grow a Company? 

Mark Roberge is a venture capitalist, managing director at Stage 2 Capital a small but very hands on VC. He also teaches at the Harvard B-School and one of his favorite questions is, what’s the best way to grow a company? 

 

He uses the above chart to answer that question. On the vertical axis is customer retention and on the horizontal axis is growth. So look at it for a sec. You of course want to be in the green circle – awesome retention of more than 90% and awesome growth. But what’s the best way to get there? Should you “blitzscale and go for the double double triple triple blow out your go to market team…or should you be more careful and focus on nailing retention and then and only then go for growth?

What do you think most VC’s would say? What would you say? 

What would Daniel Dines, the CEO of UiPath say? 

How UiPath Approached the Problem

As we shared at the top…UiPath shunned conventions and expanded internationally, very rapidly, well before it hit a $1B valuation. And then grew like crazy, got out of control and had to reign in and plug some holes – but the growth didn’t stop. Go go go. And very clearly based on its performance and reading through the S1 the company has great retention – it uses a metric called gross retention rate which is 96 or 97% – very high. 

So maybe that’s the right formula – go for growth, grow fast, “Let Chaos Reign, Then Rein Chaos” as Andy Grove would say. Go fast horizontally and then go vertical in the above chart, right? 

You need to try to do the impossible, to anticipate the unexpected. And when the unexpected happens, you should double the efforts to make order from the disorder it creates in your life. The motto I’m advocating is — Let chaos reign, then rein chaos.                                                                                                                                                                    -Andy Grove

A Different Path to Success

Here’s what Professor Roberge would probably say. Something like…You can do that. But churn is the silent killer of SaaS companies. And the better path is perhaps to nail product/market fit and the retention metrics before you go for hyperbolic growth. Figure out the customer success model and KPIs that give you clarity for retention, then scale. 

There’s a science behind this which may be antithetical to the way many investors want to roll the dice and go for a grow fast or die strategy. 

Well it worked for UiPath you say, right? 

Well not necessarily…and this is where the path to IPO gets long and strange for UiPath. As we shared earlier, UiPath was founded in 2005 – out of Bucharest, Romania. The company actually started as a software outsourcing startup called Deskover. It built automation libraries and SDKs for companies like Microsoft, IBM and Google. It also built automation scripts and developed computer vision technology, which became part of its secret sauce.

In 2015, Deskover changed its name to UiPath, became a Delaware corp and moved its headquarters to New York City a couple years later. So our premise here is that UiPath actually took the preferred path espoused by Mark Roberge. Five ticks north then five more east. They slow cooked for the better part of 10 years – trying to figure out a market to serve. They spent a decade figuring out product/market fit and then threw gas on the fire. Boom!

Pretty crazy. 

Summarizing the UiPath S1

The numbers are impressive as shown below. $580M ARR with 65% growth. The asterisk is there because – like you – we thought ARR stood for Annual Recurring Revenue. It really stands for Annualized Renewal Run Rate. 

Annualized Renewal Run-Rate is a metric that is one of UiPath’s internal KPIs and it will likely communicate that publicly. We’ll explain that further in a moment. 

UiPath has a solid customer base of nearly 8,000 with good penetration into the F500 (around 63% of the F500 buy from UiPath). Most of UiPath’s business – around 70%, comes from existing customers. Its mantra of land and expand reminds us of the early days of Tableau. Like UiPath, Tableau started out as a point tool, it had passionate customers, solved the problem that analytics were too cumbersome, complicated and slow. Tableau would land, embed into a company and grow the account.  

The market fundamentals for UiPah are very good – automation is super hot right now and the pandemic has created an automation mandate – we’ll share some data there. UiPath is a leader – we’ll show you the Gartner MQ for RPA. UiPath pegs its TAM at $60B based on some bottoms up calculations and some data from Bain. Pre-pandemic we had it at over $30B and we felt that was conservative. Post pandemic the TAM is definitely higher. 

According to the S1, UiPath will raise around $1.2B at, as we said, an implied valuation that is lower than its Series F round. We suspected at one point that perhaps the Series F investors have a ratchet to accommodate any reduction in price but most of the Series F investors are early investors too – so it’s not likely the late investors got special treatment.

It’s more likely UiPath wanted to beef up its balance sheet with the $750M from its Series F investors (it’s balance sheet numbers in the S1 show $474M in cash and equivalents at the end of January) and it saw an opportunity. It took in the $750M in early February when the market was hot. Notable comps DataDog, CrowdStrike and even Okta, were elevated at the time, and they’ve pulled back. So this is likely a case of UiPath just being conservative. It wouldn’t be a shock if that implied price is simply a placeholder for a much higher number. 

UiPath has had significant expense reductions that we’ll show you some detail on that. It has brought in fresh talent to provide some adult supervision. Around 70% of its executive leadership team and outside directors came to the company after 2019. In the company’s S1, it disclosed that its independent accounting firm identified what it called “a material weakness in our internal controls over financial reporting related to revenue recognition for the FY ending 2018…caused by a lack of oversight and technical competence within the finance department.”

The company outlined steps it took to remediate the problem, including hiring new talent – however as we said last year, we felt that UiPath wasn’t quite ready to go public. It was not, as we said at the time, the well oiled machine that was Snowflake under Mike Scarpelli’s firm operating guidance. 

But it’s pretty clear UiPath wants to take advantage of this hot stock market. It needs the cash to bolster its balance sheet even more to prepare for the massive opportunity it faces. The public offering will give it a cache and stronger competitive posture relative to AA and the big whales like Microsoft. 

One other important note from the S1. UiPath’s CEO Daniel Dines owns 100% of the Class B shares of the company and has 35-1 voting power relative to Class A shares. So the chairman and CEO controls the company, subject of course to his fiduciary responsibilities. He has more latitude to do things that Wall Street might not like without having to worry as much about activist shareholders taking over his company. 

A Look Inside the S1

There are lots of detail in the S1 and we want to give you some of the highlights. Below are the impressive graphics. As we said ARR or annualized renewal run rate just annualizes the invoice amount from the subscription and maintenance portion of revenue – i.e. the parts that are recurring. It excludes revenue from support, perpetual licenses (one time licenses) and services. So it’s pretty similar to the ARR that you’re familiar with. 

UiPath has the advantage of a sizable and growing customer base with a growing number of six and seven figure accounts. It has a dollar based net retention of 145%. This figure represents the rate of net expansion of UiPath’s ARR, from existing customers over a 12 month period. So this says UiPath’s existing customers are spending more with the company. Land and expand. 

And you can see the growth of 86% CAGR over the past nine quarters on the right. 

The Market is Ripe for Automation

Below we show some data from the Brookings Institution and the OECD that depicts productivity statistics for the U.S. The smaller charts on the right are for Germany and Japan. 

The U.S. showed productivity improvements with the personal productivity boom in the mid to late 90’s and early 2000’s but since then has dropped quite significantly. Germany and Japan are also under pressure as are most developed countries. China’s labor productivity will show declines but it’s at levels significantly higher than these countries. 

The point is we’re reaching the limits of what humans can do alone to solve some of the world’s most pressing challenges. And automation is one key to shifting labor away from the more mundane tasks toward more productive and important activities that can deliver lasting benefits. This, according to UiPath, is its stated purpose – to accelerate human achievement. And the market is ready to be automated. For the most part. 

The post isolation economy will increasingly focus on automation to drive productivity as we’ve discussed extensively.

UiPath’s Leadership Position

Here’s a snapshot of the RPA magic quadrant from Gartner. Nearly everyone’s a winner in these reports, even just getting on the chart is a win for some companies.

We’ve reported extensively on  the two-horse race between UiPath and Automation Anywhere. We would shuffle this deck a bit, however. We would more clearly separate those two from the others. And from our vantage point, UiPath’s IPO is going to either force AA to respond or UiPath will extend its lead – that would be our prediction. 

We would have Pega higher on the vertical as we think they’re executing well, although they are not an RPA specialist to that probably hurts them in the positioning. And we probably would drop Blue Prism down a bit. One major difference is we would definitely have Microsoft looming large as a challenger more than a visionary. But Gartner does good work and its analysts are very deep into this stuff so we don’t want to discount that.

Spending Data on UiPath Remains Impressive

Below is a candlestick chart from ETR that shows the components of Net Score or spending momentum – that’s the the blue line. Market Share, or pervasiveness in the survey, is the yellow line. The greens represents the percent of customers spending more and the reds are spending less or replacing. The gray is flat spending. And even though UiPath’s Net Score is declining, at 61%, it’s a very elevated score. Anything over 40% in our view is impressive so holding in the 60’s and 70’s over the several quarters is very good for UiPath.  While the yellow line, Market Share dips a bit, it’s only because Microsoft is so pervasive in the data that it tends to somewhat overwhelm and skew the curves. 

UiPath’s Big Momentum Comes From Existing Customers

Below is another way to look at this data. It’s a wheel chart that shows the components of Net Score. What’s happening here is the bright red is defections. So very small. That’s churn. Tiny. And the forest green is existing customers spending more at 49%. Big. The lime green is new customers…again from the S1, 70% of UiPath’s revenue comes from existing customers. 

This data backs up and extends our earlier discussion. The optimal path for growth is to get product market fit right, nail the retention metrics, codify the sales process and conditions for great customer outcomes, add cohort sales, scale and build a moat. This is the path UiPath has taken and while at times the company appears to have been redlining….it’s pretty impressive performance.

Focus on Existing Customers Supports Land & Expand

The graphic below is a snapshot from the January ETR survey and it lines up UiPath next to its competitors. It cuts the data only on those customers increasing spending. So what we saw in Q1 was the pace of new customer acquisition for UiPath was decelerating from previous highs but UiPath shows here that it’s outpacing the competition in terms of increased spending momentum from existing customers.

More evidence of land and expand.

UiPath Even Gains Momentum in Shared Accounts

The graph below provides further evidence that UiPath has a strong account presence, even in accounts where its competitors are present. 

In the 149 shared accounts from the Q1 survey where UiPath, Automation Anywhere and Microsoft have a presence, UiPath’s Net Score or spending velocity is not only highly elevated, it’s relative momentum is accelerating compared to last year. 

Some Callouts From the S1

So there’s some good news in the numbers but some other things stood out in the S1 that are  worth more attention. Below is a picture of UiPath’s income statement. 1. Look at the growth. The company was doing something like a million dollars in revenue back in 2015 and it surpassed $600M last year. Amazing. And 2. look at the gross profit. Gross margin is almost 90% because revenue grew so rapidly and last year its costs went down in some areas like service – less travel was part of that.

3. Now jump down to the Net Loss line. Normally you would expect a company growing at this rate to show a loss — the street wants growth – and UiPath is losing money. But its net loss went from $519M to only $92M. 

4. And that’s because the operating expenses went way down. Typically, a company growing at this rate would show corresponding (directional, not proportional) increases in sales and marketing expenses, R&D and even G&A. But all three declined in the past twelve months. Now reading the notes there were definitely some meaningful savings from no travel and cancelled events – UiPath invests in holding great events around the world. But to drop that precipitously with such high growth is surprising. 

As a point of reference, look at Crowdstrike’s income statement. Hyper-growth but its sales, marketing, R&D and G&A expense lines are all growing in absolute terms as revenue grows. Perhaps at a slower rate…but they’re not shrinking in absolute dollar terms. 

So either UiPath has applied some magic automation process to its business and it has found the holy grail of operating leverage…or the company was running way too hot on the expense side and had to cut to clean up its income statement for the IPO and conserve its cash. 

With the recent $750M raise plus the injection of cash from the IPO we’ll be watching these line items. We would expect UiPath will continue to invest heavily – especially in R&D and go to market.

UiPath is Cash Flow Positive – Really?

And just to add a bit more to this unconventional journey…When have you seen an explosive growth company in tech or software, just about to go public, show positive cash flow? It’s rare. Again – go look at companies like Snowflake. They are not showing positive cash flow. Not yet – they’re growing and trying to run the table and out sprint the competition.

Crowdstrike on the other hand was cash flow negative when it IPO’d, however within months it flipped to cash flow positive. So perhaps Crowdstrike is a better compare than Snowflake. 

So you have to ask why is UiPath operating this way? In part because they were running so hot that they had to reel things in to get ready to IPO. But Daniel Dines is an unconventional CEO and maybe this is planned – perhaps all along he’s had a strategy to put the pedal to the metal and grab a lead, get to the public markets and then steady the ship, for a while, get some muscle memory as a public company and step on the gas again. 

Either way, it’s going to be really interesting to see how this stock reacts when it IPOs. Our prediction is the current market momentum will carry UiPath.  The tech rotation seems to have been a buying opportunity. Combined with the froth from the recent Coinbase IPO and an appetite for high growth tech names we think these mean good things for UiPath. 

Key Factors to Watch

We must ask. Is this IPO window dressing or did UiPath uncover a new productivity and operating leverage model? The obvious answer is this company doesn’t want to miss the market window. It wants the cash now to compete and we think it’s using the IPO as a forcing function to get its house in order and begin a new chapter as a public company. 

Will the automation mandate sustain? We think it will. The forced march to digital, however unpleasant, was an effective wake up call to get digital ‘right.’ And even a downturn we think will confer advantage to automation vendors, especially UiPath because of its simpler adoption model, great training, strong community and product roadmap. 

Pricing. UiPath has dramatically expanded its portfolio and had to reprice everything. We’re not so worried about that. It will figure out the right pricing for the portfolio in the near term. Our bigger concern is SaaS pricing in general. We think it’s flawed and very unfairly weighted toward the vendors. Rather we’d like to see cloud-like consumption pricing move to the SaaS market more broadly. 

This is the reason we put cloud on the chart. We think cloud pricing is the right way to price. Pay by the drink. Cancel any time. Datadog, Snowflake, Stripe, Twilio…modern SaaS startups have moved to a consumption/usage pricing model. We think over time the term lock in model will give way to true consumption based pricing. And while UiPath’s cloud revenue today is minimal, over time it must continue to grow cloud and we think that will force a re-think in pricing and revenue recognition. So watch that. 

How will the street react to Daniel Dines having control? Generally we feel that solid execution will outweigh those concerns but we’ll see. Generally we admire  a CEO / Chairman who has enough confidence to secure control in this way. We saw what happened to EMC with activist investors and it eliminated a once-great company. We saw how Michael Dell responded and will never allow that to happen to his company. Reasonable people can debate this issue but we feel as though if you’re willing to deal with the consequences and have a strong enough company, why wouldn’t you maintain control. 

The bottom line is that UiPath has really favorable market momentum and fundamentals. While it is signing up for the 90-day shot clock, the fact that the CEO has control means they can look to the long term and invest accordingly…that’s often easier said than done but Dines has that option. 

We like the automation space, it’s a large market and UiPath, as we’ve been reporting, is well-positioned for continued growth. Frankly, we would be surprised if the stock doesn’t rocket on day 1 of trading. But as we always stress, it’s rare that you won’t find a better buying opportunity after the first day. But like we said with Snowflake, if you just want to get in and get it over with, hold your nose and dive in.

Good luck…

Keep in Touch

Remember these episodes are all available as podcasts wherever you listen.

Email david.vellante@siliconangle.com | DM @dvellante on Twitter | Comment on our LinkedIn posts.

Also, check out this ETR Tutorial we created, which explains the spending methodology in more detail.

Watch the full video analysis:

Image credit: iQoncept

 

Note: ETR is a separate company from Wikibon/SiliconANGLE.  If you would like to cite or republish any of the company’s data, or inquire about its services, please contact ETR at legal@etr.ai.

 

Keep in Touch

Thanks to Alex Myerson and Ken Shifman on production, podcasts and media workflows for Breaking Analysis. Special thanks to Kristen Martin and Cheryl Knight who help us keep our community informed and get the word out. And to Rob Hof, our EiC at SiliconANGLE.

Remember we publish each week on theCUBE Research and SiliconANGLE. These episodes are all available as podcasts wherever you listen.

Email david.vellante@siliconangle.com | DM @dvellante on Twitter | Comment on our LinkedIn posts.

Also, check out this ETR Tutorial we created, which explains the spending methodology in more detail.

Note: ETR is a separate company from theCUBE Research and SiliconANGLE. If you would like to cite or republish any of the company’s data, or inquire about its services, please contact ETR at legal@etr.ai or research@siliconangle.com.

All statements made regarding companies or securities are strictly beliefs, points of view and opinions held by SiliconANGLE Media, Enterprise Technology Research, other guests on theCUBE and guest writers. Such statements are not recommendations by these individuals to buy, sell or hold any security. The content presented does not constitute investment advice and should not be used as the basis for any investment decision. You and only you are responsible for your investment decisions.

Disclosure: Many of the companies cited in Breaking Analysis are sponsors of theCUBE and/or clients of theCUBE Research. None of these firms or other companies have any editorial control over or advanced viewing of what’s published in Breaking Analysis.

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