Five9 Q1 2026 Earnings Call - AI Revenue Surges 68% as CEO Pivots to Platform-Led Consumption Model
Summary
Five9 delivered a strong start to 2026, with Q1 revenue of $305 million and subscription revenue accelerating 13% year-over-year. The standout metric is AI revenue, which grew 68% to an annual run rate of over $125 million, now representing 13% of total subscription revenue. CEO Amit Mathradas framed the quarter as a turning point, emphasizing a shift from selling seats to a consumption-based model where AI displaces labor but keeps budget within the platform. Management raised full-year 2026 guidance, citing a backlog that is converting faster than expected, particularly in the second half of the year. The company also announced a $200 million new share repurchase program, signaling confidence in cash flow generation and intrinsic value.
The strategic narrative centers on Five9’s platform advantage in an AI-driven contact center market. Management argued that point solutions are insufficient for enterprises seeking governance, real-time orchestration, and human-agent oversight. Customers are increasingly migrating from on-premise systems to cloud platforms to unlock AI’s full potential, with Five9 positioning itself as the trusted provider for this transition. Organizational changes, including a new Chief Marketing and Growth Officer and streamlined leadership layers, aim to accelerate execution. Retention metrics stabilized at 107% subscription DBRR, and EBITDA margins expanded to 24%, though a one-time vendor discount skewed Q1 results. The company expects AI revenue growth to fluctuate quarterly due to varied deployment schedules, but full-year growth is projected to exceed 40%.
Key Takeaways
- Q1 2026 revenue reached $305 million, up 9% year-over-year, exceeding the high end of prior guidance.
- Subscription revenue grew 13% year-over-year, driven by CCaaS revenue up 8% and AI revenue surging 68%.
- AI revenue hit an annual run rate of over $125 million, representing 13% of total subscription revenue, up from 8% a year ago.
- Full-year 2026 revenue guidance was raised to a midpoint of $1.26 billion, with EPS guidance increased to $3.26.
- Management announced a new $200 million share repurchase program, building on an existing $150 million authorization.
- CEO Amit Mathradas outlined four priorities: performance culture, operational optimization, core business stabilization, and AI-empowered customer experiences.
- The company is shifting from a seat-based model to a consumption-based model, with customers committing to fixed revenue contracts that allow reallocation of budget toward AI tools.
- AI revenue growth is expected to fluctuate quarterly due to varying customer deployment schedules, but full-year 2026 AI growth is projected to exceed 40%.
- Subscription dollar-based retention rate stabilized at 107%, with expectations for further inflection in the second half of the year.
- Management highlighted a significant backlog of new logo and install-based bookings, with back-end loaded deployments driving double-digit growth acceleration in H2 2026.
- Five9’s platform strategy leverages trust, governance, and real-time orchestration to differentiate from point solutions, appealing to enterprises seeking integrated AI and human-agent workflows.
- A new organizational structure, including a Chief Marketing and Growth Officer role, aims to unify go-to-market strategy and improve execution speed.
- Q1 EBITDA margin expanded to 24%, benefiting from a one-time vendor discount that will not recur in future periods.
- Customers are increasingly migrating from on-premise systems to cloud platforms to unlock AI capabilities, with Five9 positioned to capture this structural shift.
- The company expects annual adjusted EBITDA margin to exceed 24% and free cash flow to be approximately $175 million in 2026.
Full Transcript
Andy Dignan, President, Five95: During today’s conference call, certain statements will be made that are not historical facts and are considered forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to, statements regarding our Q2, second half of 2026, and full year 2026 guidance, expected improvements in operating and financial metrics, CCaaS and AI revenue growth trends, industry trends, including with respect to AI, our strategy, priorities, and execution, our product roadmap and technology investments, our markets, customer demand trends, our market position and opportunity, our capital allocation strategy, including our share repurchase programs and other future events or results. Such statements are simply beliefs and predictions should not be unduly relied upon by investors. Actual events or results may differ materially, and the company undertakes no obligation to update the information in such statements.
These statements are subject to substantial risks and uncertainties that could adversely affect Five9’s future results and cause these forward-looking statements to be inaccurate, including the impact of adverse economic conditions, lower growth rates within our installed base of customers, failure to manage our technical operations infrastructure, unsuccessful development of our AI solutions, failure to maintain and develop our contact center solutions, failure to achieve the anticipated benefits of our share repurchase activity, and the other risks discussed under the caption Risk Factors and elsewhere in Five9’s annual and quarterly reports filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. In addition, management will make reference to non-GAAP financial measures during this call.
A discussion of why we use non-GAAP financial measures and a reconciliation of our GAAP versus non-GAAP results and guidance is currently available in our press release issued earlier this afternoon, as well as in the appendix of our investor deck that can be found in the investor relations section of Five9’s website at investors.five9.com. Please note that the information provided on this call speaks only to management’s views as of today and may no longer be accurate at the time of a replay. A reminder, unless otherwise indicated, financial figures discussed are non-GAAP. Now I’d like to turn the call over to Five9 CEO. Please go ahead, Amit.
Amit Mathradas, Chief Executive Officer, Five9: Thank you, Tony, welcome everyone to our first quarter 2026 earnings call. We’ve delivered an encouraging start to the year. I am particularly pleased to report an acceleration in subscription revenue growth with top and bottom line results coming in above the high end of the guidance ranges. While we are still early in our work, this quarter marks an important step in showing that our actions are beginning to translate into better business performance with the indicators we care about moving in the right direction again. This is my first full earnings call as CEO. I want to frame our work around four priorities that I believe are essential to driving long-term value at Five9. First, building a performance-driven culture rooted in accountability and transparency. Second, optimizing operations. Third, stabilizing and strengthening the core business. Fourth, winning in AI-empowered customer experiences.
Let me start with our first priority, culture. Over the past three months, I’ve spent significant amount of time with our teams and leaders across the company and had frank conversations with employees across functions and geographies. What is clear to me is that Five9 has talented people, highly strategic assets, and a real desire to win. Winning also requires clarity of mission, high standards, urgency, and accountability. We need a culture where performance is measured rigorously, decisions are made quickly, and leadership is held to a high standard. That starts with me. Transparency with the investor community is equally important. Over time, our story has become harder for investors to underwrite than I believe it should be. Some of that was about how we executed, how we communicated, and how clearly we translated our strategy into measurable progress.
Going forward, we will demonstrate progress through clearer, relevant, and trackable metrics that help investors assess the health of the business and hold management accountable. We understand that investors want evidence, not ambition, and our job is to convert our vision into results that are quantifiable. Turning to operations. Over the past year, and with the support and oversight of the board, Five9 has been executing a significant operational review designed to improve efficiency and simplify execution. This work, which was well underway before I joined, helped drive the 470 basis points increase in EBITDA margin from 2024 to 2025. This foundational work is crucial, but it is only the beginning. We are now in a better position to move faster and reinvest in critical areas.
Building on this foundation and with the support of external advisors, I am leading a series of deep dives across the product portfolio to align investments with our long-term competitive priorities. To help accelerate this effort, we are filling gaps and making changes in leadership, adjusting our organizational design, including reducing spans and layers to improve focus, speed, and accountability. These changes will help us operate more efficiently and effectively and build more disciplined foundation for innovation, growth, and continued operating leverage over time. An example of this was our recent hire of Jay Lee, our new Chief Marketing and Growth Officer. In this newly created role, Jay will unify global marketing with revenue strategy and operations to build a more aligned, insights-driven go-to-market engine that delivers a seamless experience for customers and partners.
Let me shift to my point of view on the strategic outlook for our industry and our business specifically. AI is one of the most important shifts underway in our industry, and customer experience is one of the most compelling application areas. In my conversation with customers, I’m consistently hearing that AI is fundamentally increasing the importance and value of every customer interaction. Historically, contact center spending has been overwhelmingly weighted towards labor, creating a difficult trade-off between lowering costs and delivering better experiences. AI is acting as a catalyst to change this. Customers now see the potential to reallocate a portion of their labor spend to fund the combination of AI and enhanced CX, better addressing the trade-off between cost and quality. This makes the move to a modern cloud-based platform more urgent than ever. This shift is forcing a critical decision.
Customers must now consider how AI is incorporated into their CCaaS platform because they want to avoid a sprawling collection of disparate AI tools that cannot seamlessly coordinate between their human agents. This means that AI point solutions are not enough because they only solve a fraction of the problem. Enterprises are looking for a complete customer experience platform they can trust to handle the entire life cycle, the orchestration, the data, the integrations, and the governance needed to run reliably in production. This is precisely what Five9 provides. What’s interesting is that AI handles a large share of routine customer requests. The role of agents is elevated, not eliminated. People become experts who manage complex escalations and provide essential oversight, a necessity in several regulated industries.
A platform infused with AI and CX technology empowers these agents with real-time guidance and suggested next steps, while simultaneously giving supervisors unprecedented visibility into every interaction, not just a sampling. Importantly, human-based intelligence and case resolution provides a critical feedback loop for training AI agents, which in turn drives continuous performance improvements of the entire unified platform and further differentiates Five9. This evolution is about more than just efficiency. It’s about value capture. As AI reduces the customer’s traditional labor spend, that budget shifts towards technology. We believe this fundamentally expands our monetizable surface area. By enabling entirely new use cases and more differentiated customer experiences, our path to success is no longer about simply selling seats. Instead, it’s about selling a complete solution based on capabilities and consumption.
This is where we believe our category is going. We plan to lead it by pairing these and other powerful agentic capabilities into a platform that has trust governance that enterprises seek. We are not assuming success here. We must earn it, and we will measure ourselves not by demos, but by production, adoption, and customer outcomes. We are seeing signs that our strategy is working. In the 1st quarter, we posted our 2nd consecutive quarter of year-on-year accelerating subscription revenue growth, an important indicator that the core business is strengthening. We are also seeing customers adopt our AI solutions in production as an integrated part of our CX platform, leading to multiple quarters of strong AI revenue growth. This effort is amplified by the strength of our platform and our ecosystem.
Our cloud-native CCaaS platform is built for high reliability and features open integrations, which has allowed us to build an ecosystem of over 1,400 partners. Our deep strategic relationships with market leaders within this ecosystem are critical, serving to validate our technology, strengthen our go-to-market reach, and accelerate enterprise adoption. This is a large opportunity, and we believe Five9 is one of the few key players truly positioned to capture it. We intend to do so with both urgency and discipline. Before I hand it over to Bryan Lee, let me say a few words about capital allocation. We take our role as stewards of shareholder capital seriously. Our approach will be disciplined, return-oriented, and balanced. This includes investing organically in our business, evaluating inorganic opportunities against a high strategic and financial bar, and when appropriate, returning capital to shareholders.
On the last point, reflecting our confidence in the company’s intrinsic value, we intend to complete our remaining amount of $150 million share repurchase authorization by the end of Q3. In addition, our board has authorized an additional $200 million share repurchase program. We see this as a compelling use of capital, and Brian will provide more details in a moment. Since joining in February, it has become even clearer to me that Five9 has talented employees, a portfolio of highly strategic assets, and significant upside potential. It has also become clear to me that we must operate with greater urgency, better execution, and higher accountability as we build towards an AI-driven future. That work is underway, and I intend to drive meaningful change as we work to turn Five9 from a good company into a great business with a disciplined focus on creating long-term shareholder value.
With that, I’ll turn the call over to Brian.
Bryan Lee, Chief Financial Officer, Five9: Thank you, Amit. Good afternoon, everyone. I would like to begin by underscoring our commitment to transparency in our reporting. To that end, starting today, you’ll find the supplemental metric disclosure in the investor relations section of our website. While many of these metrics have been disclosed previously, we believe this new format will help simplify your modeling. Amit noted, we have taken decisive action on returning capital to shareholders. After repurchasing $10 million of shares in the first quarter, we intend to enter into an accelerated share repurchase program for the remaining $90 million under the current authorization, which we expect to be completed by the end of Q3. The board has also approved a new share repurchase program of $200 million, which we expect to execute opportunistically.
These actions reflect our deep conviction in our long-term opportunity and confidence in continuing to generate strong free cash flow while also providing ample strategic flexibility. Turning to our financials. Q1 revenue was $305 million, up 9% year-over-year. Of the total for the quarter, the contributions from subscription, telecom, and professional services were approximately 82%, 12%, and 6% respectively. Our subscription revenue grew 13% year-over-year. This was driven by our CCaaS revenue, which grew 8%, and our AI revenue, which grew 68% to an annual run rate of over $125 million. For clarity, please note that this AI revenue figure now includes both enterprise and commercial, providing a complete view of this growth driver.
Our AI revenue now represents approximately 13% of total subscription revenue, compared to approximately 8% a year ago. The year-over-year growth rate accelerated from 49% in Q4 2025 to 68% in Q1 2026, primarily driven by a backlog ramping earlier than anticipated. Looking ahead, we expect total subscription and CCaaS growth to trend with our overall revenue guidance. AI revenue growth is expected to fluctuate quarter to quarter, given varying ramp schedules, with full year 2026 growth anticipated to exceed 40% year over year. LTM dollar-based retention rate, defined in our filings as the retention rate of recurring revenue from subscription plus telecom, was 105%, which is the same as Q4 2025.
Given our focus on subscription revenue going forward, we will transition our DBRR disclosure to LTM subscription DBRR, which came in at 107% in Q1 compared to 106% in Q4 2025. Please refer to the previously mentioned supplemental metric disclosure on our investor relations website with 9 quarters of historical dollar-based retention rates. As anticipated, both DBRR metrics stabilized in Q1, and we expect Q2 to be at relatively similar levels, ±1 percentage point, before inflecting in the second half of the year. Adjusted gross margin in Q1 was 64%, compared to 62% in Q1 last year. Adjusted EBITDA was $74 million, or 24% of revenue, compared to $53 million or 19% of revenue in the same quarter last year.
In terms of cash flow, cash from operations was $64 million or 21% of revenue, and free cash flow was $49 million or 16% of revenue. These profitability and cash flow margins benefited by slightly more than 1 percentage point in the first quarter from a one-time discount negotiated with a key vendor that we do not expect to recur in future periods. From a balance sheet perspective, we ended the quarter with $724 million in cash equivalents, and short-term investments. On to guidance. For the second quarter, we’re guiding total revenue to a midpoint of $306 million, with a range of $303 million-$309 million.
For the same period, our guidance for non-GAAP EPS is a midpoint of $0.60 per diluted share, with a range of $0.65-$0.69. The largest driver of the sequential decline is the one-time discount I mentioned a moment ago that benefited Q1. Additionally, this guidance includes an estimated 3.6 billion shares being retired through our accelerated share repurchase. For the second half, we continue to expect total revenue growth to accelerate to double digits, driven by our backlog of both new logo and install-based bookings. For non-GAAP EPS, we expect steady sequential increases in the second half.
For the full year of 2026, we’re guiding total revenue to a midpoint of $1.26 billion, with a range of $1.254 billion-$1.266 billion, which is up from our initial midpoint guidance of $1.254 billion. Our guidance for 2026 non-GAAP EPS is a midpoint of $3.26 per diluted share, with a range of $3.22-$3.30, which is up from our initial midpoint guidance of $3.18 per diluted share. Additionally, we continue to anticipate annual adjusted EBITDA margin to exceed 24% and annual free cash flow to be approximately $175 million.
That said, our organizational design initiatives are expected to initially result in higher temporary expenses that provide longer-term cost efficiencies along with improved focus, speed, and effectiveness. To assist with modeling, please note the following: Purchase of PP&E is expected to be approximately 3.5% of revenue for 2026 due to a global data center refresh.
Please refer to the presentation posted on our investor relations website for additional estimates, including share count and taxes, as well as GAAP to non-GAAP reconciliations. With that, I would like to ask our President, Andy Dignan, to join us for Q&A and open the call. Operator, please go ahead.
Operator: Okay. We will begin with Sitikantha Panigrahi from Mizuho. Please go ahead and unmute at this time.
Andy Dignan, President, Five93: Great, thank you, and congrats on a good quarter. Yeah, Amit, thanks for outlining all those four priorities. Just wondering, what are the two, three most concrete measurable milestones you think investors should track over the next 12 months to assess the progress of each of those areas?
Amit Mathradas, Chief Executive Officer, Five9: Yeah. Thank you, Siddhi, and thank you for the question. Look, one, I think as we are going through, as I am going through deeper into the business, I think the number one thing that I mentioned, you know, in the script and in the call is I’m spending time on really diving deep into the market, into our tech, into our products, and where Five9 should be positioned. I think one of the benchmarks that I think you all should be looking for is, you know, in the near future, me coming out and laying that out for you all and being very clear with, you know, how that is progressing and where we are taking the business. Two, I think there are two other, you know, two or three major other areas that I’ve been diving into.
One is, you know, culture. Like, how do we actually drive more accountability, more ownership, you know, more organizational design improvements within spans and layers, within things like, you know, faster location strategy and reducing, you know, a lot of the bureaucracy and processes internally. I think the right measure of that should be reflected in the pace that we bring to the market in terms of, you know, delivery, in terms of delivery of some of these things that are underpinning such as, you know, margin improvements, such as growth improvements. I think that’s probably the best way to hold us accountable, and we’ll be laying that out for you all.
Andy Dignan, President, Five93: That’s helpful. Then one more follow-up. You must have talked to customers and partners over this quarter. AI is moving much faster than any other trend we have seen before. What are your customers doing in terms of adapting to this faster pace on AI? What’s your assessment of, you know, Five9 opportunity there and why you think, you know, Five9 is well-positioned versus some of the other emerging vendors?
Amit Mathradas, Chief Executive Officer, Five9: Yeah. Another good question. Thank you. Look, as I’ve been talking to customers, it is pretty obvious that everyone is excited about AI, what it can do, and where it is going, you know, particularly in the contact center. I think the one big thing that the customer is starting to realize is that AI is truly allowing for greater interactions to happen and really driving an increase in their ability to connect with customers who are maybe tier 2, tier 3, who they had relegated into different channels because of OpEx. Look, customer experience, CX, is a reflection of your OpEx. I know how to make, you know, call times go to 0 or hold times go to 0, double your OpEx. It’s challenging. As these...
as AI comes in, I think there is 1 big thing that is happening. One, as AI replaces seats, those $ are not leaving the contact center. It is actually getting reallocated towards software. Companies are looking to platforms like us that can actually marry voice, digital, and AI and present it in a format where it is all connected under 1 roof actually allows them to get far larger outputs, increases in efficiency through that system. That is really where AI is going. That is why I think Five9 is really well-positioned because of this shift. By the way, I think you all may know this, but the TAM for CCaaS plus support AI is nearly 2x the displacement of seats that will happen.
We now get to play in a much larger market as we evolve and build into this platform.
Andy Dignan, President, Five93: That’s a great color. Thank you, Amit.
Operator: Our next question will come from Terrell Tillman from Truist. Please unmute and ask your question at this time.
Terrell Tillman, Analyst, Truist: Hey, guys. Thanks. Second question is from Carlo and for Terry. You mentioned seat counts. We were wondering how has the end market been for contact center seat counts? Are we seeing it, you know, stay stable, growing or declining? I guess, what are customers sharing in terms of their plans for seats as we look into the next, you know, 6-12 months? Thanks.
Bryan Lee, Chief Financial Officer, Five9: Let me start on the actual seat count and then Amit Mathradas can chime in as well. You know, we mentioned that the seat count continues to grow at a healthy rate, relatively in line with the CCaaS revenue growth that we have provided, and that was a commentary we provided last quarter, and it continues to be the case. You know, from a, If you look at the backlog of our customers that we’ve already won, there’s actually a large portion that’s CCaaS oriented and a smaller portion but fast-growing portion that’s AI. Definitely the seat growth from a customer perspective internally has been growing at a healthy rate.
Operator: Got it.
Amit Mathradas, Chief Executive Officer, Five9: I think to the second part of your question around what customers are telling us, it’s what I, you know, mentioned to Siddhi, which is as they see the ability for them to get more efficient with their human agents, what they really want to do is start investing into, you know, software tools, platform tools, AI tools that allow for the overall efficiency to grow and for them to actually increase the overall interactions. A number of customers that we are working with today is exactly in that.
Catharine Trebnick, Analyst, Rosenblatt: Got it, guys. Thank you. Appreciate it.
Operator: Our next question will come from Raimo Lenschong from Barclays. Please unmute and ask your question.
Raimo Lenschong, Analyst, Barclays: Hey, thank you. Can you hear me okay?
Operator: Yes.
Raimo Lenschong, Analyst, Barclays: Hey, perfect. Congrats. Great start, Amit. Quick question. If you think about the industry at the moment, there’s all this think about AI disruption, but the one thing that we pick up when we talk with guys in the field is like, how many of the data, of the call centers are still actually on premise, and how we actually kind of need to think about first cloud migrations, and then we can do AI. What have you picked up in your, you know, customer in your client conversations the first 3 months on that whole dynamic?
Because, you know, for many years you were the cloud provider that had the structural kind of tailwinds, in theory, that should be coming your way even more now, you know, given that people have to modernize finally.
Amit Mathradas, Chief Executive Officer, Five9: Yeah, thank you for that question. You know, I’ll chime in and let Andy add any additional color. Look, what we are seeing is there’s still, you know, a vast majority of customers that are still on-prem. Eventually, you know, will have to make that decision of moving to the cloud. A lot of them are actually testing out AI right now and saying, "Can we just go deploy AI on-prem?" Candidly, we’ve seen, you know, a pickup of some of those requests where they wanna come in and test AI first. Also, I can tell you that the results have been a little bit of a mixed bag, right?
When you are on-prem, you know, the holy grail of AI working seamlessly is data and architecture and how it is connected to the rest of your ecosystem. In some cases it works, in some cases it doesn’t. I think, you know, you will see a lot more of customers testing AI on-prem. My hunch is for some it may be okay, but a lot of them will start realizing that you have to move to the cloud for this to be, you know, the best of breed and full adoption and the scalability that they want. You know, that’s my kinda first read into it. Andy, anything to add?
Andy Dignan, President, Five9: Yeah. The only thing I would add would be, yeah, we’re seeing more of those conversations. I think throughout the kind of process of working on an opportunity, they realize that they can move to. There’s this concern that you gotta take a year to move to the cloud and then start getting AI. We’ve done a lot both within our product and our processes around how we deliver, that we can deliver AI at the beginning but also migrate them at the same time so they can kind of get the best of both worlds is really what they’re looking for. So.
Raimo Lenschong, Analyst, Barclays: Okay. Perfect. Yeah. Thank you. That’s very clear. Brian, first of all, like, thanks for the kind of tightening up disclosure, et cetera. That’s really helpful. Looking forward to working through that. The other thing is like, if you think about guidance, it’s Q1, usually people kind of think it’s Q1, do I change my annual guidance or not? Can you talk a little bit about the puts and takes for you, to change what’s, you know, to change annual guidance a little bit as well and about why you took that level? Thank you. Congrats.
Bryan Lee, Chief Financial Officer, Five9: Yeah, absolutely, Raimo. Thank you. Let me take that in two parts. Let me actually talk a little bit about the first quarter, and then I’ll talk about the annual guidance. In Q1, subscription was the key driver of revenue growth. You know, it was the second quarter of acceleration to 13%. If you break that down between CCaaS and AI, CCaaS was stable at 8%, and AI accelerated to 68%, primarily driven by backlog, you know, the strength of backlog converting to revenue.
By the way, before I go to the guidance, for modeling purposes, I do wanna point out something around the AI revenue because this time the disclosure is different from the past periods in the sense that we’re including enterprise and commercial to give you a full picture of our AI revenue as well as total subscription. That AI, as a % of total subscription revenue, going back a year ago for Q1 2025, it was approximately 8% of total subscription revenue, and it stepped up one percentage point each quarter to 9, 10, 11 in Q2, 3, 4, until the most recent quarter was 13% of total subscription revenue. Hope that helps from a modeling perspective. Now going forward into, you know, Q2 and the rest of the year, it’s really driven by the backlog that we’ve been talking about.
It’s growing at a very healthy rate, and we have great visibility into it. It’s comprised of both new logo and install-based bookings that are converting into revenue. Every customer has a unique ramp schedule, and it just happens to be back-end loaded, which is what’s driving that acceleration into double-digit growth in the second half. You know, it’s the visibility that we have that gives us that comfort to actually increase the midpoint of our annual guidance from $1.254 billion to $1.26 billion, which essentially covers all of the Q1 beat plus a little bit more.
Raimo Lenschong, Analyst, Barclays: Okay. Perfect. Thank you.
Operator: Our next question will come from Catharine Trebnick of Rosenblatt. Please unmute and ask your question.
Catharine Trebnick, Analyst, Rosenblatt: Yeah. Thank you very much. Nice quarter. You know, you hired a new chief marketing officer. I was really happy to see that, Jay Lee. Can you explain? I noticed he has a really strong data background, so it doesn’t look like your typical branding type of marketing person. Give us some details on why it was a particular hire with that background. Thank you.
Amit Mathradas, Chief Executive Officer, Five9: Yeah. Thank you for that question. Yeah, we’re super excited to have Jay here. As you rightfully called out, you know, we also adjusted his title to reflect what he is here to do, which is Chief Marketing and Growth Officer. Look, Jay brings, you know, a tremendous amount of experience, not only in the marketing realm, but also in analytics data and piecing those things together.
From my view, I think as we look at driving a unified go-to-market, as we look at driving improvements in efficiency and how we, you know, serve our customer, you have to look at the full life cycle. That implies that you have to all be working off one sheet in terms of the data, in terms of the funnel, in terms of how it actually translates into revenue operations and all the strategies that ties to it. This is one example of, you know, some of the changes that we are making, which is, I think, you know, beneficial to the company, where under one roof you’re going to have one go-to-market strategy, one go-to-market delivery mechanism, and one go-to-market measurable data set that drives all of that.
Catharine Trebnick, Analyst, Rosenblatt: Yeah. Thank you. That was a good explanation.
Operator: Our next question will come from Michael Funk of Bank of America. Michael, you can go ahead and unmute at this time. Our next question will come from Scott Berg of Needham. Scott, you can go ahead and unmute at this time.
Andy Dignan, President, Five92: Hi, everyone. Hopefully you can hear me. Nice quarter here. Amit Mathradas, in your 4 priorities, one of them was winning in AI, your 4th one. It’s obviously the key question most investors are asking on Five9, given what the state of the contact center environment is. How do you see the company today, and do you think you’re winning effectively? Is this a product item? Do you think you need to lean into product or potentially lean into maybe distribution more to continue to drive and really capture what’s a pretty interesting AI opportunity today?
Amit Mathradas, Chief Executive Officer, Five9: Thank you, Scott. Look, I think the answer really is if I just start with the basics and say, how are we performing today with our AI capabilities? I think just looking at the performance of what we’ve delivered with 68% year-on-year growth, acceleration, and just a whole year view of where that’s going, I feel like we’ve got, you know, some pretty good chops on what we are doing today. That being said, I do think the market is moving fast and we have already, you know, announced some new products that are in beta that will be coming out, you know, in the next quarter or so into general availability. For me, the real viewpoint is how do we stay on top of that? How do we speed that up?
Near term and long term, I do think at the end of the day, which I’d mentioned on my first call, look, to be disciplined, I cannot serve every piece of AI in CX. We will have to be selective as to what the platform requires and where our advantages are and where, you know, whether that is done organic or inorganic, and then where we partner with, you know, other players to fill gaps that we may not, you know, fill or things that are vertical or certain CX centric that we may need. I don’t, you know, Scott, I don’t think the answer is one or the other.
I think it’s going to be a combination of how do we continue to deliver and build faster, bring more products tied to where our platform is going and where we want to, you know, own the market and where partners play a role to fill gaps that would make it easier for end users to just say, "Hey, I’ll work with Five9 because it’s all available in one, in one place.
Andy Dignan, President, Five92: I’ll pull there. My follow-up’s actually for Andy as a follow-up to that question is: What do you see in the sales pipelines today? What’s the team seeing, you know, in Q1 maybe versus a year ago on that fast changing environment perspective? Is the composition deal substantially different, you know, in terms of, I don’t know, feature functionality, et cetera, or I guess, does it stay pretty steady?
Andy Dignan, President, Five9: I mean, I think we tracked, you know, obviously our RFP and pipeline levels. They’ve been, you know, at elevated levels that we’ve talked about for the last two years, and that continues forward. In terms of the makeup, I would say, you know, similar to what we talked about earlier, we are seeing more conversations around that sort of AI first. Again, I think we have a strong go-to-market around that as well as a product strategy. I think that’s gonna continue to play to our strength.
Andy Dignan, President, Five92: Understood. Thank you.
Andy Dignan, President, Five9: Thanks, Scott.
Operator: Okay. Our next question comes from Rishi Jaluria of RBC. Rishi, you can go ahead and unmute at this time.
Andy Dignan, President, Five90: Oh, wonderful. Thanks so much for taking my questions. I’ll keep it to just one. You know, look, great to see these continued results, continued AI momentum, and appreciate the greater transparency. You know, one thing we’re all trying to figure out a little bit of is thinking about what exactly the impact of AI broadly, whether that’s your portfolio, DIY, third party. Look, I appreciate that you, you’re talking about you can’t do everything yourselves and partner where it makes sense. To what extent has that had an impact on the nature of conversations you’re having with net new customers around migrating from on-premise to cloud? How has that changed maybe some of your competitive dynamics, you know, in the RFP process?
Maybe just help us kinda understand all these pieces, how they’re currently coming together, and maybe, you know, is there a point at which AI in contact center starts to get, not mature enough, but more wide, widespread enough that it actually starts to speed up some of the sales cycles? Thanks.
Amit Mathradas, Chief Executive Officer, Five9: Look, I’ll take a stab at that question and, you know, Andy may have more color. Look, I think in the on-prem solution, or on-prem offerings, what we’re getting a lot of requests for are AI apps that actually speed up, you know, a lot of the humans that are out there, things like Agent Assist, you know, some of our AI agents to help as they are, as they are, you know, contemplating voice, you know, change outs.
Look, the whole view for me, and I’ll say this when I think about, you know, my role as a new set of eyes on this business. What is happening in the CX space is as AI is replacing humans over time, as I mentioned earlier, those dollars are going back into the software, going back to make, you know, all of these humans and AI itself more efficient. If you just fast-forward to your question, even six months, even a year, I think people think about point solution AI as, "Hey, here’s this all." Most customers are basically saying, "If I have humans that are going to be around, I need it all to be on one platform because there are certain functions I cannot do through point solutions." Agent Assist doesn’t work unless it is in real-time conversations.
If I’m even talking about AI voice, like, you know, agentic, think about what a platform offers in the near future, right? You are going to have as someone comes in and says, "I wanna speak to a human," you go into hold time. That hold time actually becomes a window in which AI agents actually perform a, maybe a check or get you ready for the human call. Those sorts of things cannot happen in point products working on, you know, working independently for a platform. As humans get elevated, the other big thing that’ll happen is you will start finding that human agents will start monitoring a bunch of AI agents.
If an AI agent is stuck on pronouncing Mathradas, my last name, and does it 3 or 4 times, a human can see something go yellow and say, "I’m directly stepping into that call and taking it over." That cannot happen, you know, with point products. That has to happen on a platform. I think the one thing that, you know, everyone is talking about agentic. Here at Five9, we’re talking about humanic, which is a combination of humans and agents doing things that have not been thought about before. That is, you know, that is the direction we’re going, and that is where I see this all coming together. I hope, I hope that that helps answer some of your questions.
Andy Dignan, President, Five90: Absolutely. Very helpful. Thank you.
Operator: Okay. Our next question comes from DJ Hynes of Canaccord. DJ, you can go ahead and unmute at this time. Our next question will come from Elizabeth Porter. Elizabeth, you can go ahead and unmute at this time.
James, Analyst: Great. Thanks. This is James on for Elizabeth. Congrats on the strong results. Just going back to some of the earlier comments. I think I heard you guys say that some of the strength you saw this quarter was from more of that backlog coming in ahead of expectations. Just curious if you could unpack that a little bit more. You know, was that more attributable to strong execution on your side? Was it customers looking to accelerate those deployment timelines? Then as a result, just, you know, how has that sort of influenced your thinking for the path of those deployments for the rest of the year for what’s still in the backlog?
Amit Mathradas, Chief Executive Officer, Five9: Yeah. Jamie, it was a combination of number of factors. It wasn’t just one customer. It was many customers. As I mentioned earlier in the year, we did have some contingencies built into our guidance as one, part of it is that in terms of timing coming in earlier than anticipated. It’s also, we always say that our PS resource in terms of implementation is always there ready to deploy as quickly as the customer wants. I think there are times when the customer is aligned faster internally on their end, and the deployment cycle actually speeds up. I think we saw some of that. The deployments was the strongest on the AI side this quarter, which is why you saw that acceleration from 49% to 68% year-over-year growth.
Going into Q2 and beyond, I’ll give a little bit more color in terms of, you know, CCaaS versus AI, because they’re all coming from the backlog here. You’ll see that we have our total revenue guide where, you know, we reported 9% in Q1. We’re guiding to 8% in Q2, double-digit growth acceleration in the back half. The CCaaS portion from backlog will more or less mirror that shape. AI on the other side will actually fluctuate up and down because of the varying deployment schedules that our customers have. At the end of the day, for the annual number, we’re anticipating AI revenue growth to exceed at a minimum 40% year-over-year.
Andy Dignan, President, Five96: Great. Thank you so much.
Operator: Okay. Our next question comes from Peter Levine of Evercore ISI. You can go ahead and unmute at this time.
Peter Levine, Analyst, Evercore ISI: Thank you very much for taking my question. Maybe the first one, Amit Mathradas, you made a comment, Pedro Marks not really selling seats anymore, moving more towards a consumption model. Maybe just walk us through, like, what that progression looks like. You know, what are you hearing from your customers, how does the model change over time if it does become more consumption? Second, Bryan Lee, I know last quarter we talked about the guide for 27 being anywhere from 10%-15%. Is that still the path forward as you think about the business now and as you go into the second half? Thank you.
Amit Mathradas, Chief Executive Officer, Five9: Thank you, Peter. Look, just to start, what we have started to transition to with all our new logos and as well as with our existing customers as they renew, is more to a like a, you know, a fixed revenue model where they are committing to a revenue number. What that brings is predictability to them and predictability to us. What the whole thesis there is that as seats compress over time, potentially, that our customers get the option to fill that revenue with our AI tools and others.
Why they love it is because it brings predictability and they have a, you know, they’re also betting on our roadmap, which says, "Hey, as new products come in, we’re backing that, and we will keep consuming those AI tools to make our humans and the combination more efficient." That is why. We’re seeing that starting to happen. You know, a lot of our business is starting to move. It’s early days, so, you know, as I mentioned, you know, that is starting to pick up. What it goes towards, Peter, is the original comment I made, that as seats compress-Customers are saying, "Hey, those dollars aren’t leaving the contact center. They will be utilized in other forms of AI and software tools." That is what they’re committing to.
I’ll let Andy add in anything, you know, beyond that.
Andy Dignan, President, Five9: Yeah, no, we’ve seen strong traction. I think, A, customers have a great interest in sort of buying into that motion. I think back to something that Amit said, the most important part is they’re oftentimes making 3- and 5-year decisions, right? Their belief in that, in the roadmap, what we have today and what we’re gonna be delivering, is what gives them the confidence to sign up for 3 to 5 years and make these revenue commitments. Again, it helps sort of protect our downside as well as, you know, easier for Brian to forecast.
Bryan Lee, Chief Financial Officer, Five9: Thank you. Peter, I’ll just chime in with last part of your question. We’re not gonna be providing 2027 guidance today, but you have our 2026 guidance, which keeps us on the path toward double-digit growth, exiting the year and expanding EBITDA margin. As you know, we’re in the middle of deep dive across the portfolio and, you know, we have our new Chief Marketing and Growth Officer, we wanna let that process play out before revisiting the longer-range framework.
Amit Mathradas, Chief Executive Officer, Five9: Very much.
Operator: Okay, our next question comes from James Fish of Piper Sandler. Jim, you can go ahead and unmute at this time.
Andy Dignan, President, Five91: Hi, guys. This is Ryan on for James Fish. Congrats on the quarter. One question I had was, as you guys think about the guide going forward and your backlog that’s driving that guide, how much upside do you guys have and view into pipeline through the end of the year? How much of that left is go gets versus what you kinda already have in that pipeline?
Bryan Lee, Chief Financial Officer, Five9: Ryan, I think the best way to look at that is if you break down our guide for the last three remaining quarters, it basically implies we need to get $80 million of incremental recurring revenue. I would say about 2/3 of that roughly will be coming from our DBRR. As we said, it’s gonna stabilize in the first, in the second quarter, ±1 percentage point, and then flex upward in the second half. About 2/3 of that $80 million comes from that portion. The remaining third is coming from new logos, it’s all new logos from our backlog that’s converting to revenue. As I mentioned earlier, there’s different schedules for each customer and happens to be much more back-end loaded.
There’s essentially no dependency on new logo go gets for the rest of the year.
Andy Dignan, President, Five91: Great. Thank you.
Operator: Okay, our next question comes from Thomas Blakey of Cantor. Thomas, you can go ahead and unmute at this time.
Andy Dignan, President, Five94: Hi. Thank you, and thank you for taking my questions. I just wanted to talk about that AI volatility. Brian, thank you for all the extra color, by the way. Covering you guys over the years is very helpful. Maybe just start with question number one. Can you just double click on what’s driving that, you know, kind of volatility in terms of obviously a dynamic inflection in terms of AI usage across the space?
Bryan Lee, Chief Financial Officer, Five9: Yeah, absolutely, Tom. This is really the way the bookings have come into our backlog from 2025, and it’s the deployment schedule of each of those customers. Because, yeah, it’s a fast-growing part of our business, but it’s still small, right? It’s still 13% of total subscription revenue. When you have these customers that are ramping at different times throughout the year, it does cause quite a bit of lumpiness. That’s really all it is in terms of when we say it’s gonna fluctuate up and down throughout the year. We’re really looking at bottoms up every customer that’s in our backlog and looking at the schedule of deployment, and that’s just how it’s playing out for the rest of the year.
Andy Dignan, President, Five94: Was there an element, just to follow up to that, was there an element of, you know, use cases or seasonality or, like, non-recurring, you know, type of revenue in there in the AI line, Bryan?
Bryan Lee, Chief Financial Officer, Five9: No, not at all. There was no seasonality whatsoever. It was actually all just new, more on the new logo, you know, AI backlog that was ramping.
Andy Dignan, President, Five94: Okay. Then, just to I think it was to Peter’s question about or, one of the prior questions about this, the high visibility in terms of the back half acceleration. I know we’ve asked about this in the past. I apologize to double click here, just, you know, conversions has been, you know, a bit of a sticking point as some of these deals have become increasingly more complex and expansive in scope, given the importance of CX at organizations. Can you maybe talk about how, you know, Five9 is executing, you know, say, this year or in the recent quarters versus prior years in terms of, you know, ramping up, you know, these deals from backlog? That’d be helpful. Thank you.
Bryan Lee, Chief Financial Officer, Five9: Yeah, absolutely. I mean, we have a wide variety of customers that we are actually deploying. The Fortune 50 financial services company is 1 of them. They started ramping in 2025, then they’re ramping more so throughout 2026 as well. That’s just 1 example. There are many other customers in our backlog that are actually continuing to deploy throughout the year. As I mentioned earlier, we do have really good visibility into those. We work extremely closely with our customers to make sure that we’re deploying on schedule. It’s really about the customers that drive sometimes the fluctuations in that. Generally, you know, the professional services organization forecasts very well, we continue to stay right on track on that front.
Andy Dignan, President, Five94: Thank you, Bryan.
Operator: Okay, our next question comes from Jackson Ader of KeyBanc. Jackson, you can go ahead and unmute at this time.
Jackson Ader, Analyst, KeyBanc: Great. Evening, guys. Thanks for taking our questions.
Just one question really from me that we’ve seen in some other areas of software that the, just the pace of AI innovation has maybe led to some, like, spending paralysis, you know, on the, on the behalf of customers. They just feel like it’s too early on, things are changing too quickly. They’re, like, nervous to pick a winner, too early in the, in the innovation cycle. I’m curious, since customer experience was a relatively early environment for AI to kind of infiltrate. I guess it’s two questions from the same thing. One is, like, Amit, do you feel like you saw that and you that that did play out in your market?
Then second, if so, are we starting to get past that where there’s no longer this uncertainty about picking winners, and it’s time to actually act and spend and deploy? Thank you.
Amit Mathradas, Chief Executive Officer, Five9: Thank you, Jackson. If I think I’ve got the question right, I think you’re asking about, you know, our customers and saying, are they starting to move? Are they, you know, saying, "Hey, we’ve sat on the sideline and it’s now time to pick winners." Look, one thing I can tell you is, given the use case for CX and AI, the number of startups in this space is mind-boggling. Is mind-boggling. For our customers, you can imagine every single day they’re being inundated by, you know, here are 500 voice AI companies. Here are, you know, X amount doing something else.
I think what we are seeing from our customers is, yes, there are some early adopters that go try a few things, but what they start to really appreciate from companies like Five9, and I’m sure from others is, "Hey, what you are bringing us is tried and tested. What you are bringing us is now with the security and governance. What you are bringing us is things that may not be, hey, the bleeding edge of everything, but it is something that we know will work, and it is actually things that will drive meaningful and tested outcomes." I think that is why you are seeing, you know, a lot of customers pick us over time versus, you know, all the hundreds of options out there in the market.
My sense is, I think you’re going to see a lot more of this where, you know, the trust and governance, especially in large organizations, becomes a more meaningful part of their decision-making.
Jackson Ader, Analyst, KeyBanc: Okay. That’s great. Thank you very much.
Operator: Okay. Our next question comes from Ryan Williams of Wells Fargo. Ryan, you can go ahead and unmute at this time. Ryan Williams of Wells Fargo, you can go ahead and unmute at this time. Okay. This concludes the Q&A portion of our call. I will now hand the call back over to CEO, Amit Mathradas, for closing remarks.
Amit Mathradas, Chief Executive Officer, Five9: Thank you all for participating in our Q1 earnings call. As you all can see, you know, we’ve had a good start to the year, but there’s obviously more work to be done, and we continue to build upon this momentum and look to capitalize on the larger market opportunity for AI and CX. We look forward to updating you all as the progress unfolds throughout the year. Thank you.