SSTI March 3, 2026

SoundThinking Q4 2025 Earnings Call - 15% ARR Growth Target Sets 2026 as Inflection Point Despite Revenue Timing Headwinds

Summary

SoundThinking closed 2025 with record revenue of $104.1 million, ARR of $95.4 million, and maintained double-digit adjusted EBITDA margins. Management is betting 2026 will be the inflection year, targeting roughly 15% ARR growth to about $110 million entering 2027, driven by ShotSpotter, CrimeTracer, PlateRanger and SafePointe. That thesis is intact, but the company trimmed GAAP revenue guidance to $109 million to $111 million and narrowed adjusted EBITDA margin guidance to 16% to 18%, citing timing delays on two material bookings.

The call mixes confidence and caution. Product momentum is real: ShotSpotter expansion, CrimeTracer Gen3 adoption, early SafePointe traction and PlateRanger pilots. But timing risk is front and center. Two delayed deals, Puerto Rico and a CrimeTracer multi-agency rollout, account for more than $5 million of expected revenue and pressured near-term cash flow and EBITDA. Management has made targeted sales hires and launched a board-led efficiency review to keep the long-term ARR play intact while wrestling with short-term procurement and deployment volatility.

Key Takeaways

  • Record full-year revenue of $104.1 million for 2025, up 2% versus 2024.
  • ARR exited 2025 at $95.4 million, with management targeting approximately 15% net ARR growth in 2026, or roughly $14.6 million of ARR added, net of about $3.1 million attrition.
  • GAAP revenue guidance for 2026 was lowered to $109 million to $111 million from a prior $114 million to $116 million range, due to timing delays on two expected bookings.
  • Adjusted EBITDA margin guidance was trimmed to 16% to 18% from 18% to 20%, reflecting delayed contract recognition and continued investments in AI and product development.
  • Two delayed bookings drove most of the guidance cut: a CrimeTracer rollout across ~18 agencies (about $2.5 million) and a ShotSpotter renewal/recapture in Puerto Rico (about $2.7 million).
  • ShotSpotter remains the flagship, exiting 2025 with $67.6 million of ARR and management expects roughly $8.3 million of incremental ShotSpotter ARR in 2026, excluding Chicago and new sniper/perimeter use cases.
  • CrimeTracer Gen3 is positioned as a differentiated investigative data product, exited 2025 with $8.1 million of ARR and management expects about $3.1 million of additional ARR, timing dependent on a delayed state rollout.
  • SafePointe is the key growth bet in physical security, with $1.6 million of 2025 bookings from 11 customers, $800K booked in Q4, and management modeling about $4 million of ARR contribution in 2026.
  • PlateRanger ALPR, powered via Rekor partnership, is in early traction, with a modest 2026 ARR target of $1.5 million and five pilots converted to customers so far.
  • Procurement and deployment timing remain the primary short-term risk, exemplified by the Puerto Rico delay and the multi-agency CrimeTracer deployment slipping into 2026.
  • Customer retention is strong, revenue retention for 2025 at 99%, though 2024 Chicago non-renewal removed ~ $9 million of revenue which affected comparables and margins.
  • Cash position: $15.8 million at year end Q4, now above $16 million after bonuses; company repurchased ~225K shares for ~$3 million in 2025; approximately $36 million available on line of credit with ~$4 million drawn.
  • Management added sales leadership to accelerate execution: Kirk Arthur as SVP of Global Sales, Manuel Nylen as VP of Sales for SafePointe, and a VP for Brazil to accelerate international growth.
  • Chicago remains an outstanding opportunity, currently in administrative review after RFP evaluation; New York arrangement with NYPD remains intact in the FY27 budget, signaling stability in a high-scrutiny account.

Full Transcript

Operator: Good afternoon, and welcome to SoundThinking’s fourth quarter and full year 2025 earnings conference call. My name is Diego, and I will be your operator for today’s call. Joining us are SoundThinking’s CEO, Ralph Clark, and CFO, Alan Stewart. Please note that certain information discussed on the call today will include forward-looking statements for our future events and SoundThinking’s business strategy and future financial and operating performance. These forward-looking statements are only predictions and are subject to risks and uncertainties that are difficult to predict and may cause actual results to differ materially from those stated or implied by those statements. Certain of these risks, uncertainties, and assumptions are discussed in SoundThinking’s SEC filings, including its most recent annual report on Form 10-K and other SEC filings.

These forward-looking statements reflect management’s beliefs, estimates, and predictions as of the date of this live broadcast, March 3, 2026, and SoundThinking undertakes no obligation to revise or update any forward-looking statements to reflect events or circumstances after the date of this call. In addition, our comments on the call today contain references to non-GAAP financial measures such as adjusted EBITDA and key business metrics such as annual recurring revenue. Non-GAAP measures should be viewed in addition to and not as an alternative for the company’s reported GAAP results. A reconciliation of these non-GAAP measures to their most directly comparable GAAP measures as well as definitions of the key business metrics referenced and management’s reasons for including the non-GAAP measures and key business metrics referenced may be found in the press release.

Finally, I would like to remind everyone that this call will be recorded and made available for replay via a link available in the investor relations section of the company’s website at ir.soundthinking.com. With that, I’ll now turn the call over to Ralph.

Ralph Clark, Chief Executive Officer, SoundThinking: Thank you, operator. Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining us. I’ll begin with high-level commentary on the quarter and the year, along with an update on our near-term outlook and strategic progress. Alan will then walk through the financials in more detail and provide guidance before we open up the line for questions. Let me start with some important context. The overall market for public safety solutions is constructive and growing. I’m incredibly proud of our team for executing through some of the headwinds we encountered in 2025. Despite some of those challenges, we delivered record full-year revenue of $104.1 million, representing a 2% increase over 2024. We accomplished that while maintaining double-digit adjusted EBITDA margin profitability and while importantly making critical growth investments that we believe position us for the future.

We went live with ShotSpotter in 10 new cities, 2 universities, and expanded with 11 current customers in 2025. Additionally, we saw solid acceleration of our SafePointe business with $1.6 million of bookings from 11 customers, which we anticipate taking live in the first half of this year. We’re exiting 2025 with ARR of $95.4 million, and we believe we’re positioned to grow that ARR base by approximately 15% or $14.6 million, net of approximately $3.1 million of ARR attrition in 2026. This puts us on path to enter 2027 with $110 million of ARR.

I’ll walk you through the expected ARR build toward the end of my commentary, but we’ll highlight now that while corresponding GAAP revenue should ultimately follow that ARR growth, it is expected to lag because a meaningful portion of our ARR bookings are expected in the second half of the year. Let me step back and frame what we’re building here at SoundThinking and why we’re so confident in our future within the public safety and security SaaS market. A big part of what we do is deploy connected physical infrastructure, acoustic sensors for gunshot detection through ShotSpotter, visual sensors for vehicle intelligence through PlateRanger, and passive magnetic field sensors for concealed weapons detection through SafePointe. These devices operate in the real world, generating mission-critical data. What differentiates us is the unique data we’re able to capture at the physical layer and the AI-based algorithms we apply against that data.

Our models detect, validate, and publish actionable signals, gunshots, vehicles of interest, concealed weapons, while filtering out the noise in real time and at scale. While we’ve been working on innovating and improving our ShotSpotter solution for decades, we’ve become more intentional recently to apply our prior learnings with new data aggregation and AI tools to our other connected device solutions. Strategically, these solutions become embedded infrastructure for our customers. As we deploy more devices, we aggregate more data, which improves our AI models and increases value over time. Because our alerts are integrated directly into customer workflows, from dispatch to investigation to emerging tools like drones as first responders, our systems become operationally embedded. This creates meaningful switching friction and drives strong retention.

The result is a durable recurring revenue base that is both profitable today and we believe will compound over the long term and create real long-term value. Our 2026 ARR growth is expected to come primarily from 4 major solutions comprising the SafetySmart platform. First, ShotSpotter, which is our flagship offering and is still the leading acoustic gunshot detection solution in the market. We currently serve over 170 customers comprising over 1,100 square miles and exited 2025 with $67.6 million of ARR. We believe we can add approximately $8.3 million of additional ARR, including the $2.7 million of ARR recapture of the Puerto Rico, plus approximately $5.6 million of ARR from other new domestic and international customers, including expansions.

This ARR growth does not include Chicago nor any ARR from our recently launched perimeter-based sniper solution, which is focused on critical infrastructure protection of utility substations and corporate campuses with the potential to cover U.S. Embassy and Fort operating base deployments. We believe these opportunities represent additional upsides. We’re very pleased with the market reception of our CrimeTracer Gen3 solution launched late last year at IACP. CrimeTracer is a highly differentiated data aggregation business representing over 1 billion cross-jurisdictional CJIS records combined with Thomson Reuters CLEAR. Scale and breadth of data create a powerful foundation for investigative intelligence. With Gen3, we’re applying generative AI into that data environment to enable investigators and analysts to find what they’re looking for more naturally, surface relevant connections that result in investigative leads faster, and help deliver justice to victims of crime.

We’re very excited about local law enforcement cross-jurisdictional task force collaborations to address gang violence and organized retail theft rings. CrimeTracer exited 2025 with $8.1 million of ARR, and we estimate that we will add approximately another $3.1 million of ARR, including the $2.5 million of ARR from the execution of CrimeTracer across approximately 18 agencies within a new state, which has been delayed, but which we believe will happen no later than Q3 of this year. Third, our connected vehicle intelligence ALPR solution, PlateRanger, which is powered by our partnership with Rekor, is gaining solid traction following its launch last year.

Given the recent controversy around a certain LPR vendor that has received a lot of well-documented attention, we believe this opens up a significant opportunity for new entrants like ourselves who take security and data governance as first principles versus an afterthought. We’re modestly targeting $1.5 million of new ARR from PlateRanger this year. Last but not least, SafePointe. We continue to see strong momentum as we believe the market is recognizing that SafePointe is just not another weapons detection system, but that it is a fundamentally different architecture. Unlike legacy checkpoint-based systems that rely on active screening and create friction, SafePointe operates passively and discreetly in the natural flow of ingress and egress, leveraging advanced sensor fusion and AI to detect concealed weapons without slowing people down.

We believe that frictionless experience helps drive higher adoption, stronger customer satisfaction, enhanced visitor dignity, and real operational scalability. We’re in the early innings here as leveraging passive sensor weapons detection by harnessing advanced AI capabilities is new and innovative. As we refine deployments and expand our sales capacity, we believe SafePointe is uniquely positioned at the intersection of physical security and AI in what we call physical world AI. We’re encouraged by the tight product market fit demonstrated with Q4 2025 bookings of approximately $800,000 across six customers that all have the capacity for potential expansion. Our model estimates that SafePointe could contribute another $4 million of ARR in 2026. The balance of our overall ARR increase would come from our other products.

An important element in our ability to deliver on our growth strategy is having the right team in place. To that end, we’ve taken steps to bolster our sales execution capabilities by adding several new leaders with proven experience scaling successful go-to-market functions and driving durable profitable growth. We’ve welcomed Kirk Arthur as our new Senior VP of Global Sales. Kirk brings a unique combination of commercial gov tech sales leadership he honed at Microsoft, combined with his executive leadership roles in public safety at the U.S. Secret Service. We’re thrilled to have him join our leadership team. It’s important to note that we operated at less than our full potential in 2025 without a permanent Senior VP of Global Sales. Kirk’s arrival is a meaningful step forward in strengthening execution, accountability, and pipeline discipline across the organization.

In addition, Manuel Nylen has joined us as VP of Sales and the sales leader for our SafePointe business. Manny has a long and successful career of bringing new innovative security solutions to market. We now have a fully built-out SafePointe sales team in place, which is something we did not have in place a year ago. Lastly, we’ve added Bruna Pavan as Vice President in Brazil to help expand and accelerate our momentum in that key market. Importantly, Kirk’s leadership also frees up Gary Bunyard, who did an outstanding job serving as interim Senior VP of Sales for Q4 2025.

He will now be able to focus on key large strategic opportunities, including pursuing the contract renewal with Puerto Rico, advancing a significant SafePointe potential opportunity with a global top five healthcare system, and potentially engaging Chicago based on their RFP response. Speaking of Chicago, as we previously shared, the formal evaluation process has been completed, and we believe the recommendation has been transmitted to the appropriate procurement channels. At this stage, the matter sits with the city’s administrative process. We remain confident in the strength of our response and the technical, operational, and financial merits of our proposal. Importantly, we believe nothing about the underlying need for acoustic gunshot detection technology has changed given the formal line item budget approval for gunshot detection. We continue to be respectful while the formal RFP is active.

While timing is ultimately outside of our control, we believe the fundamentals of performance outcomes and officer safety speak for themselves. We are in a wait-and-see posture. On New York, we are pleased to see that the recently released fiscal year 2027 budget framework leaves our current 3-year agreement with NYPD fully intact. There were no proposed reductions, no carve-outs, no structural changes to the program. ShotSpotter remains embedded in the city’s public safety architecture, and it grows as NYPD integrates ShotSpotter with drones as first responders and crime gun intelligence. This is notable. New York is one of the most scrutinized policing environments in the world, and if there were any operational concerns, budget pressures, or appetite for change, we believe you would see it reflected here first. Instead, what you see is continuity.

Our system continues to do what it is designed to do, which is to provide rapid actionable intelligence to officers in the field. The city’s budget signals a steady support from our perspective that there is nothing unusual to interpret here. This is simply the steady execution of a long-standing partnership. To guidance. We know from experience that recognized GAAP revenue timing can fluctuate based on procurement cycles, deployment schedules, the cadence of bookings, and the budget headwinds, which is why we’re adjusting our full-year revenue guidance to $109 million-$111 million. To be clear, we believe annual recurring revenue reflects the 2026 inflection point and underlying compounding economic engine of our business. As we move into 2026, there are three items of focus for us. First, anticipated ARR growth.

Approximately 15% growth in our net ARR reflects expanding adoption and renewed momentum. Second, introducing customers to more solutions within our platform and focus integration with complementary solutions. Multi-product customers represent a larger opportunity than a single product deployment. We’re increasingly leading with workflow outcomes, not point solutions. Third, operating discipline. We’re investing where the returns are strongest, particularly in growth areas like SafePointe and operational levers made possible by agentic AI capabilities. As we continue to allocate resources toward our highest return opportunities, we’re also focused on ensuring the organization is operating as effectively as possible. In that context, the board and management team are undertaking a review of the business to identify opportunities to drive efficiency across the organization. Our objective is to create shareholder value and ensure the company is well-positioned in any market environment. We’ll provide updates as the review progresses.

I’ll now hand it over to Alan to talk about the numbers. Alan, over to you.

Alan Stewart, Chief Financial Officer, SoundThinking: Thank you, Ralph. Good afternoon, everyone. In spite of the challenges mentioned by Ralph, our 2025 results had many positives. Our financial performance reflects the success of our ongoing strategic initiatives, the growth of our largest products and operational efficiency measures, which supports our commitment to deliver value to our shareholders. In the fourth quarter, revenues were $24.8 million, representing a 6% increase over the prior year period. Gross profit was $12.6 million or 51% of revenue versus $11.7 million or 50% of revenue for the prior year period. Our adjusted EBITDA was $1.3 million compared to $1.7 million in the prior year period. Our adjusted EBITDA decrease was directly related to the delayed contracts from an anticipated deployment of CrimeTracer in a new state and our ShotSpotter renewal in Puerto Rico.

As a reminder, adjusted EBITDA, a non-GAAP financial measure, is calculated by taking our GAAP net income or loss and adjusting out interest income or expense, income taxes, depreciation, amortization and impairment, restructuring costs and losses including related fixed asset disposals, stock-based compensation expenses, and acquisition-related expenses, including adjustments to our continued consideration obligations. Our operating expenses were $15.1 million or 61% of revenue versus $15.5 million or 66% of revenue in the prior year period. Breaking down our expenses, sales and marketing expense in the fourth quarter was $6.5 million or 26% of total revenue compared to $6.5 million or 28% of total revenue in the prior year period.

Our R&D expenses were $4 million or 16% of total revenue compared to $3.5 million or 15% of total revenue in the prior year period. D&A expenses for the quarter were $4.5 million or 18% of total revenue compared to $5.5 million or 24% of total revenue for the prior year period. Our GAAP net loss was approximately $2.8 million or a loss of $0.22 per basic and diluted shares for the quarter based on 12.7 million basic and diluted weighted average shares outstanding. This compares to a net loss of $40.1 million or $0.32 per basic and diluted share based on 12.6 million basic and diluted weighted average shares outstanding for the prior year period. Turning to our full year 2025 results.

Revenues were a record $104.1 million, representing a 2% increase over the $102 million achieved in 2024. It should be noted that 2024 included approximately $9 million of revenue related to Chicago that was not renewed but replaced by growth of other product sales across the company. This Chicago revenue reduction also affected all 2025 profitability measures. Gross profit was $56.6 million, or 54% of revenue, versus $57.9 million, or 57% of revenue for the prior year. Our adjusted EBITDA was $12.6 million compared to the $14.4 million we achieved in the prior year.

Operating expenses decreased 1% to $65.4 million or 63% of revenue versus $65.7 million or 64% of revenue in 2024. Breaking down our expenses. Sales and marketing expense in 2025 was $26.1 million or 25% of total revenue compared to $28.1 million or 28% of total revenue in the prior year. Our R&D expenses were $15.9 million or 15% of total revenue, compared to $13.9 million or 14% of total revenue in the prior year. G&A expenses for the year were $23.2 million or 22% of total revenue, compared to $23.9 million or 23% of total revenue for the prior year.

As a reminder, we expect our G&A expenses to grow less than our revenue on a percentage basis as our company grows. Our GAAP net loss was approximately $9.4 million, or a loss of $0.74 per basic and diluted shares for the year, based on 12.7 million basic and diluted weighted average shares outstanding. This compares to a net loss of $9.2 million or $0.72 per basic and diluted shares based on 12.7 million basic and diluted weighted average shares outstanding for the prior year period. Deferred revenue as of December 31, 2025 was $43.9 million in line compared to the $43.9 million at the end of third quarter 2025.

Revenue retention rate for 2025 achieved 99%, reduced due to the non-renewal of our Chicago ShotSpotter contract at the end of 2024. Our sales and marketing spend per dollar of new annualized contract value was $0.56 compared to $0.63 in 2024. We ended the year with $15.8 million in cash and cash equivalents versus $11.8 million at the end of the third quarter of 2025. We repurchased 225,334 of our shares at an average price of $13.15 for approximately $3 million throughout 2025. Our current cash balance is greater than $16 million even after paying our annual company cash bonuses in February.

Currently, we have approximately $36 million available on our line of credit as we have approximately $4 million in debt outstanding, all on our line of credit. Turning to our guidance for the full year of 2026. We are reducing our full year revenue guidance range from $114 million-$116 million to $109 million-$111 million. This decrease is primarily attributable to delays in two expected bookings and deployments, which the timing of closure is still unknown. We thought it appropriate to reduce the revenue expansion until they are executed. The first relates to CrimeTracer. We had anticipated execution across approximately 18 agencies within a new state, representing approximately $2.5 million in revenue.

While this deployment has been delayed, we remain confident it will proceed in the near future. The second relates to our ShotSpotter renewal in Puerto Rico. When executed, this contract is expected to add approximately $2.7 million in ARR. Similar to the CrimeTracer role in the new state, we’re not clear on the timing of the contract execution. In total, these two items represent over $5 million in revenue that was originally expected to be recognized in 2025 and throughout 2026. Even if recognition of revenue is delayed, provided these contracts are executed in 2026, they should significantly increase our ARR at the end of the year. It’s also important to note that approximately 70% of the revenue related to these two items mentioned above will flow through to adjusted EBITDA.

While we believe these are temporary setbacks, we remain optimistic about the long-term value of these potential contracts and our ability to execute well if and when they get booked. We continue to monitor these developments closely. We are reducing our full year adjusted EBITDA margin guidance range from 18%-20% to 16%-18% to take into account the delay of these large contract executions, as well as the investments that we continue to make in our AI modeling and tools that we are incorporating in our products and our internal operational use. As we look to 2026, we remain focused on execution and long-term value creation.

We are encouraged by our pipeline visibility for the rest of 2026, the strong renewal rate of our customer base, expanding strategic partnerships and integrations, increasing momentum into 2026, and our ability to generate consistent cash flow while investing for future accelerated growth. Overall, we’re pleased with the progress we’ve made on each of our strategic initiatives and operational performance for the business. With that, we’re now happy to open the call for questions. Operator, will you please open the line for the Q&A?

Operator: Thank you. At this time, we will conduct our question-and-answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please press star 1 on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star 2 if you would like to remove your question from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star keys. Once again, to ask a question, press star 1. 1 moment while we pull for questions. Your first question comes from Alex Latimore with Northland Capital Markets. Please state your question.

Alex Latimore, Analyst, Northland Capital Markets: Hey, guys, Alex Latimore here on for Mike Latimore. I appreciate the color in the quarter here. The AR breakdown. ARR breakdown is very helpful for me. I had one question here on SafePointe. Can you discuss which verticals are currently most prominent in the pipeline for SafePointe?

Ralph Clark, Chief Executive Officer, SoundThinking: Yeah. Thank you for that question. Can you hear me okay?

Alex Latimore, Analyst, Northland Capital Markets: Yes.

Ralph Clark, Chief Executive Officer, SoundThinking: Yeah. Great. Yeah, this is Ralph. I would say that the primary vertical for us where we’ve had a lot of success has been the healthcare vertical because they really do value the passive nature of our weapons detection system that allows for full ingress and egress without having a checkpoint or any kind of friction. That is really the vertical that we’re leaning in on most, although we do have some other opportunities in other verticals, in corporate verticals, as an example.

Alex Latimore, Analyst, Northland Capital Markets: Awesome. thanks, Ralph. I also was curious on the status of your CaseBuilder deployment, I believe in the NYPD Corrections Department. If you could give any insights there, that would be very helpful.

Ralph Clark, Chief Executive Officer, SoundThinking: Great. Yeah, this is Ralph again. Thank you for that question. We’re continuing to make really good progress in lighting up new applications to support new use cases at the New York City Department of Correction deployment. We also have a fairly significant Department of Corrections deployment in Orleans Parish as well. That’s moving along very nicely for us.

Alex Latimore, Analyst, Northland Capital Markets: Awesome. One final question? What level of attrition are you assuming for ShotSpotter this year?

Alan Stewart, Chief Financial Officer, SoundThinking: This is Alan. I’ll go ahead and assume. I mean, at this point, you know, we’re expecting a total ARR attrition of about $3 million, as Ralph mentioned. We would expect that probably half to two thirds of that would be related to ShotSpotter, only because we’re getting ready for continued customer having some budget challenges. So far we’ve been working through most of those and getting positive results, it is best for us to be appropriate for a larger portion of that to come from budget issues.

Alex Latimore, Analyst, Northland Capital Markets: Awesome. Ralph, Alan, thank you. Thank you for the time. Thank you for taking my questions.

Operator: Your next question comes from Trevor Walsh with Citizens. Please state your question.

Trevor Walsh, Analyst, Citizens: Great. Hey, Ralph and Alan. Thanks for taking the questions. Ralph, maybe for you, can you elaborate a little bit more on the comments you made at the end of your prepared remarks around the board review? Is it essentially just sort of taking a closer look at cost saving measures and kind of where you guys can be more efficient from that perspective? Maybe just give a little bit more detail there. That’d be great.

Ralph Clark, Chief Executive Officer, SoundThinking: Yeah. I think it’s a good governance practice to have the board kind of engage with the senior leadership team to really kind of pressure test. Are we appropriately looking at opportunities to drive greater efficiencies? We’re now over 300 plus employee organization. We’ve made some critical investments in AI. We’re seeing some positive benefits from agentic AI and think that that’s gonna drive a lot more productivity. I think the board is appropriately engaged with us to see if there’s more that can be gained from that. More to come. It’s still in the very early stages, but more to come.

Just know that, we’re gonna be putting our heads together and seeing and asking the question, "Can we do things more efficiently?

Trevor Walsh, Analyst, Citizens: Got it. Okay, great. Thanks, Ralph. Maybe just staying with you, and then I’ve got one last follow-up for Alan. I think there was a new disclosure or at least kind of a new theme around the use case for sniper kind of gunshot detection in a, I guess, embassy or more foreign deployed type of environment. Just curious if that commentary is related to kind of actual opportunities that are in flight.

That would seem, you know, obviously you’ve got some international type of capabilities around ShotSpotter proper, so I’m wondering, are you just essentially pairing that use case with the boots on the ground go to market wide that are already doing that international business, or is this kind of will this be a new motion with bodies that’ll kind of have, you know, from a headcount perspective to kind of fully pursue that opportunity?

Ralph Clark, Chief Executive Officer, SoundThinking: Sure. Yeah. I mean, great question. Just to step back for everyone that may not have kind of caught that the way that you caught it, we did. We continue to innovate around our ShotSpotter technology solution. The team did a really good job developing a new use case, a new technology architecture that now allows us to do kind of perimeter-based Sniper-based types of gunshot detection. Principally what that means is we’re not just relying on muzzle blasts, but we’re also relying on supersonic snap of a bullet kind of passing by a sensor where you can co-locate the sensor along with the intended target. Our initial thoughts are to focus on utility substations.

We know that those utility substations have been subject to be attacked as a part of kind of bringing down the electric grid. Having a perimeter-based solution kind of around protecting that substation so that a substation utility firm can be notified if someone’s firing inside that perimeter into the substation seems like a natural use case. We’re doing this through SoundThinking Labs. We’re not expecting or don’t have any revenue allocated to this, although we are aggressively looking and are resourcing ourselves with a little bit of sales motion to go get some early trial customers within the substation utility market. In terms of forward operating bases and embassies, that would be kind of a next layer type of thing.

That’s not our primary focus right now. Our primary focus is to get this up and running and deployed with a couple utility companies this year and see where it goes from there.

Trevor Walsh, Analyst, Citizens: Got it. Thanks, Ralph. Super helpful. Alan, last one for you. I’m just trying to bridge some of the comments that you both made specific to SafePointe. I think you had said there was $1.5 million in bookings either in the quarter or maybe that was for the full year for SafePointe, but then you, I think, expects $4 million in total for net new in fiscal 2026. I guess two-part question, can you just help me bridge the $1.6 actually in bookings that you said? Is that? I guess, what was the average duration around that contract? I’m just trying to understand kind of what does that look from an ARR perspective in 2025, kind of, you know, moving to the potential for $4 million in 2026. Does that make sense, Alan?

Alan Stewart, Chief Financial Officer, SoundThinking: It does. No, it makes perfect sense.

Trevor Walsh, Analyst, Citizens: Great

Alan Stewart, Chief Financial Officer, SoundThinking: A great question. I think the biggest thing to take away is if you look at what we did for the entire year versus how things are ramping up and what we did with the $800K in Q4, you can see the things are that we have done investing appropriately in the product and how we’re selling it, and we’ll be adding more capability in terms of the sales team as well, where that $800,000 in Q4, we are expecting to be similar or greater, as we go into each quarter in 2026. In terms of adding $4 million of ARR, we feel pretty confident about that.

As Ralph mentioned earlier, our over half of our customers are in the healthcare sector, many of those are already saying, "Okay, we really like what you’re doing. We’re gonna expand to this." Some of those healthcare agencies have not just like 10 or 20 hospitals, some of them have like 100. We’re feeling very positive about what we’re doing in terms of setting expectations of the customer, in terms of improving the product deployment. Although it does take some time to deploy those once we book them, we believe that we’ll be able to hit the ARR increase that we have talked about in the script.

Trevor Walsh, Analyst, Citizens: Got it. Perfect. Thanks, folks. Appreciate the questions.

Operator: Your next question comes from Eric Neuber with Lake Street Capital Markets. Please state your question.

Eric Neuber, Analyst, Lake Street Capital Markets: Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my questions. Wondering if you could comment on how things have changed with sales reps only selling the ShotSpotter or the PlateRanger rather than the whole platform at once.

Ralph Clark, Chief Executive Officer, SoundThinking: This is Ralph. Thank you for that question. I’ll start, and Alan, jump in and add and correct as appropriate. I think the first thing I would state is that we have a specialized, dedicated team to essentially sell SafePointe. It’s comprised and led by Manny, who I recently, who I just mentioned on the call here, joined us as our VP of sales for SafePointe. Currently, he has three direct sales executives reporting to him, along with a pre-sales engineer. It’s a very tight, focused unit of Manny leading four individuals to go drive a SafePointe business, which is very security-oriented.

When you go to our public safety side of the business, it gets a little bit more complex, but I’ll try to simplify it by stating that we have a number of field sales territory reps that are responsible for selling the full product suite. Increasingly, you’re gonna see us tighten that up with the bundle. Think in terms of, you know, a ShotSpotter bundle with PlateRanger or PlateRanger bundled with CrimeTracer. They basically own geographies, and they’re developing new relationships with new customers, as well as having conversations about expanding our footprint with in existing customer relationships. On top of those folks, we have an overlay organization, and that’s where we have a little bit more specialization with respect to the solution.

You find someone that is really, really smart about CrimeTracer as an example, or CaseBuilder or ShotSpotter or PlateRanger. That’s kind of the overlay organization that works collaboratively with our field sales organization. That’s all kind of led by our new Senior VP of Global Sales, Kirk Arthur, who just joined us. He also has some ops capability in his organization as well. These are the folks that are primarily responsible for renewal activities and proposal developments when we’re responding to RFPs and the like.

Alan Stewart, Chief Financial Officer, SoundThinking: He works collaboratively with our customer success organization, which is led by Senior VP, Larry, who is leading the customer success organization.

Unknown Analyst, Analyst: Thanks.

Alan Stewart, Chief Financial Officer, SoundThinking: I know Alan’s being-

Unknown Analyst, Analyst: That’s really helpful.

Alan Stewart, Chief Financial Officer, SoundThinking: Okay, thanks.

Unknown Analyst, Analyst: Yeah. Switching to the international segment, how did that trend in the quarter? You know, can you comment at all on what you expect the international revenue to grow in 2026?

Alan Stewart, Chief Financial Officer, SoundThinking: Sure. This is Alan. I’ll go ahead and start, and Ralph can add or correct as well. Although things did go a little slower than we thought in 25, it has picked up. We have several things that we are expecting in 26, that by the end of the year, there will probably be 3 new deployments in 3 separate countries. We are deployed in all 3 of those right now. It is a bit expansion that we’re expecting, but also very positive in terms of what we’re doing. It’s also why we hired a new sales VP directly in Brazil. Brazil is a very large potential customer and country for us that has a lot of gun violence. We’re doing quite well in the Niterói deployment there.

Uruguay has already expanded once, and we are expecting possibly another one, and then some more deployment in South Africa.

Unknown Analyst, Analyst: Perfect. Thank you. I’ll hop back in queue.

Operator: Thank you. Your next question comes from Jeremy Hamblin with Craig-Hallum. Please state your question.

Jeremy Hamblin, Analyst, Craig-Hallum: Great. Thanks for taking the questions, guys. I just wanna start by kind of reconciling Q4 a little bit. You know, the EBITDA came in, you know, quite a bit below the guidance issued in November. Just wanted to understand, was that. It looks like, you know, maybe gross margins were, you know, light of expectation, but you also did cut pretty aggressively in G&A. I wanted to marry where the, you know, kind of the $2.5 million discrepancy lay. In thinking about the improvement for 2026, you know, you’ve got about a $6 million revenue improvement, but, you know, almost $5 million improvement in EBITDA. Just understand the drivers of that.

Alan Stewart, Chief Financial Officer, SoundThinking: Sure. This is Alan, and I’ll give you the, I think, some of the focus areas I think might be important to understand. We had expected to get Puerto Rico and the new CrimeTracer deal earlier than we have. That would have been included a portion of that in Q4. That did not happen. I would say the other thing, though, that when we look at things across the board, you have some costs certainly, you know, maybe related to, you know, stock-based comp and things like that ultimately affect our adjusted EBITDA. You can see that our stock-based comp actually went down right from that, as well as going down the actual OpEx.

I mean, G&A went from $5.5 million in Q4 last year, down to $4.4 million this year, $4.5 million, so $1 million less. We are doing more things we believe to be appropriate in terms of how we’re spending to make sure that we’re doing the investment the right way, which is what Ralph answered one of the earlier questions about things that we evaluate on how we’re doing them. I think how does that go and look into 2026? What you can expect is similar things for us in terms of looking at ways we can be more efficient.

Hopefully, as we’re seeing, like SafePointe itself specifically increase and ShotSpotter possibly increase in miles versus last year, you’ll see the revenue going up without the OpEx actually going up too much other than what we’ve already mentioned. Hopefully that answers your question, Jeremy. I’m not sure.

Jeremy Hamblin, Analyst, Craig-Hallum: Yeah, that’s helpful. G&A, should we be thinking about that as something that may be closer to flat on a year-over-year basis as you make, kind of some decisions around, you know, kind of what you need to drive the organization? ’Cause presumably you know, the four and a half million in Q4 is a bit of a depressed level. As you noted, you know, maybe SBC got reversed or, you know, certainly was lighter than normal.

Alan Stewart, Chief Financial Officer, SoundThinking: Mm-hmm.

Jeremy Hamblin, Analyst, Craig-Hallum: You know, just wanted to see if you could maybe clarify that a little bit as we think to 26.

Alan Stewart, Chief Financial Officer, SoundThinking: Yeah. No, that’s also a great follow-up question, and I would just kind of, you know, talk about years. Like in 2024, our G&A was $24 million. In 2025, it was down to $23.2 million. I would expect that it may be slightly higher than $23.2 million as we go into 2026 as revenue grows, possibly not much at all. We are expecting G&A to grow less than a percentage of revenue, our goal would be to control as many things as we can. Sometimes there’s things we can’t control, like legal costs, et cetera. Other than that, things that we can control should keep our G&A relatively flat.

Jeremy Hamblin, Analyst, Craig-Hallum: Got it. Then wanted to follow up on PlateRanger. So you noted, you know, fairly significant events that are occurring in the ALPR space. Seems like there’s tremendous opportunity out there to potentially gain some contracts. We’ve seen some other firms that have already flipped contracts. But wanted to understand progress that you’re making, you know, with that product line and just how far down the line you are with potential deals that you might be able to win, whether they’re new deals for municipalities that don’t have the, you know, this type of service already or potentially wins that you might be able to take away from, you know, the vendor.

Ralph Clark, Chief Executive Officer, SoundThinking: Sure. This is Al, I’ll go ahead and start, Ralph can add or correct as well. The good news is we had several pilots going into or starting the second half of last year. We’ve already converted 5 of those to actual customers, which is good. We’ve got another, probably 4 or 5 that we’re looking at and working on them to convert them to actually customer contracts. From a revenue perspective, having no revenue at all, really, in 25, we believe we can get that $1.5 million in ARR by the end of the year. The sooner we can get those converted, the higher the revenue will be.

Jeremy Hamblin, Analyst, Craig-Hallum: Got it. Thanks so much for taking my questions. Best wishes.

Ralph Clark, Chief Executive Officer, SoundThinking: Thank you.

Operator: Thank you. We have reached the end of the question and answer session. I will now turn the call back over to Ralph Clark for closing remarks.

Ralph Clark, Chief Executive Officer, SoundThinking: Great. Thank you very much. Thank you everyone for joining us today. I want to express my sincere gratitude to our shareholders for your continued support as we’ve navigated through what this was a fairly transformative year. Your partnership has been instrumental enabling us to make the strategic investments and organizational assets position us so well for future growth. The trust that you’ve placed in our team and our vision to become the leading public safety technology partner for communities and enterprises nationwide drives us forward. To our clients, I also want to say thank you for choosing SoundThinking as your strategic partner in public safety and security operations. SoundThinking remains committed to making communities safer through technology, transparency and innovation that address real world public safety challenges.

As we look ahead into 2026, I’m energized by the opportunities before us and confident in our ability to deliver on our commitments to deliver shareholder value. Thank you all and have a great evening.

Operator: Thank you. This concludes all today’s call. All parties may disconnect. Have a good day.