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Bumble reports mixed Q2 2024 results amid strategic shift By Investing.com

Bumble Inc. (BMBL) has released its financial figures for the second quarter of 2024, revealing a 3% increase in total revenue to $269 million, bolstered by a 14% rise in paying users. Despite this, the company anticipates a slight revenue decline in the third quarter and a modest growth projection for the full year.

Bumble’s net earnings saw a significant jump to $38 million, up from $9 million in the previous year, attributed to a reduction in operating expenses by 9%. The company is in the midst of a strategic reset, focusing on enhancing the customer experience and engagement, particularly in mature markets, while also acquiring the community app Geneva to diversify its offerings.

Key Takeaways

  • Bumble’s total revenue increased by 3% to $269 million in Q2 2024.
  • The company saw a 14% rise in paying users, with Bumble app revenue up 5% to $218 million.
  • Badoo app and other revenue decreased by 2% to $51 million.
  • Net earnings for the quarter increased to $38 million, compared to $9 million in the same period last year.
  • Operating expenses decreased by 9% due to cost structure improvements.
  • Bumble expects Q3 revenue to decline by 1% at the midpoint and projects 1-2% revenue growth for the full year.
  • The company is prioritizing product and marketing investments, expanding safety features, and improving customer mix.
  • The acquisition of Geneva is part of Bumble’s strategy to venture into non-romantic relationships.

Company Outlook

  • Bumble projects Q3 revenue to dip by 1% at the midpoint, with an adjusted EBITDA margin expansion to 29%.
  • Full-year revenue growth is expected between 1% and 2%, with negative net ads anticipated in Q4.
  • The company remains committed to its buyback program and reports a strong balance sheet.

Bearish Highlights

  • The company is experiencing a revenue decline due to FX headwinds and a decrease in paying users.
  • Softness in new user growth, especially in the US and mature markets, is affecting revenue.
  • Adjustments to the company’s strategy may temporarily impact revenue growth.

Bullish Highlights

  • Bumble’s net earnings have increased significantly due to cost structure improvements.
  • The company is optimistic about future growth opportunities, particularly with the BFF feature and community-building aspects.
  • Bumble sees potential for monetization through advertising and plans to increase marketing spend in Q4.

Misses

  • Revenue deceleration is attributed to weaker growth in new users and increased price sensitivity among consumers.
  • The demographic imbalance within the ecosystem has led to the need for strategic adjustments.

Q&A highlights

  • Bumble has completed a significant restructuring earlier this year to optimize execution, with no further restructuring planned.
  • The success of the company’s transition will be evaluated based on ecosystem balance, engagement and retention, and revenue value creation.
  • Bumble aims to test various techniques and markets to find the optimal balance for revenue extraction and will update investors on progress.

Through strategic shifts and a focus on long-term value creation, Bumble Inc. is navigating a challenging market while investing in growth opportunities. The company’s acquisition of Geneva and its commitment to enhancing user experience reflect its adaptability and forward-thinking approach. As Bumble continues to execute its new strategy, investors and users alike will be watching closely to see how these changes translate into sustained growth and profitability.

InvestingPro Insights

Bumble Inc. (BMBL) has shown resilience in its Q2 2024 performance, with a notable increase in net earnings and a rise in paying users. As investors assess the company’s potential, they might consider the following InvestingPro Tips and real-time data:

InvestingPro Tips:

  • Bumble’s management has been proactively buying back shares, demonstrating confidence in the company’s future prospects.
  • The company’s high shareholder yield is a positive sign, indicating a return of value to investors. For those interested in more in-depth analysis, there are 18 additional InvestingPro Tips available at https://www.investing.com/pro/BMBL.

InvestingPro Data:

  • With a market capitalization of approximately $1.02 billion, Bumble stands as a significant player in the online dating sector.
  • The P/E ratio is currently at 48.41, suggesting that investors are willing to pay a premium for the company’s earnings.
  • Revenue growth over the last twelve months up to Q1 2024 has been strong at nearly 15%, highlighting the company’s ability to increase its top-line figures in a competitive market.

These metrics, coupled with the strategic acquisition of the community app Geneva, underscore Bumble’s commitment to diversifying its offerings and enhancing user engagement. The company’s strategic reset, aimed at improving the customer experience in mature markets, is further supported by its solid financials and management’s actions to deliver shareholder value.

Full transcript – Bumble Inc (BMBL) Q2 2024:

Operator: Hello, and welcome to the Bumble Second Quarter 2024 Financial Results Conference call. My name is Elliot, and I’ll be coordinating your call today. (Operator Instructions). I’ll now like to hand over to Cherryl Valenzuela, Vice President of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.

Cherryl Valenzuela: Thank you for joining us to discuss Bumble’s second quarter 2024 financial results. With me today are Bumble’s CEO, Lidiane Jones; and CFO, Anu Subramanian. Before we begin, I’d like to remind everyone that certain statements made on this call today are forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements are subject to various risks and uncertainties and reflect our current expectations based on our beliefs, assumptions and information currently available to us. Although we believe these expectations are reasonable, we undertake no obligation to revise any statement to reflect changes that occur after this call. Descriptions of factors and risks that could cause actual results to differ materially from these forward-looking statements are discussed in more detail in our earnings press release and filings with the SEC, including our annual report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2023, and our subsequent periodic filings. During the call, we also refer to certain non-GAAP financial measures. These non-GAAP measures should be considered in addition to and not as a substitute for or in isolation from our GAAP results. Reconciliations to the most comparable GAAP measures are available in today’s earnings press release, which is available on the Investor Relations section of our website at ir.bumble.com. And with that, I’ll turn it over to Lidiane.

Lidiane Jones: Thank you, Cherryl, and good afternoon, everyone. When I joined Bumble seven months ago, we embarked in a plan to strengthen our foundation to deliver long-term growth and profitability. We added outstanding talent to our team. We set our cost structure. We enforce a culture of excellence and begin to reimagine Bumble App’s product to ensure we’re delivering the best and most relevant customer experience to women today. As the first dating app built with women at Epicenter, we continue to believe that when dating is better for women, it is better for everyone that is scorch Bumble’s mission and will remain our priority. In April, we launched the first chapter of Bumble App’s Evolution, including a refresh-looking feel, improved onboarding and profile creation plans, as well as launched opening moves, which gives women more choice in how conversations get started. This launch was just the first step and was successful in achieving two important objectives, delivering a better experience for women and improving engagement. We have seen increases in users with high-quality profiles, more matches for women and people voting us across genders. These early wins hoist to the type of customer value that drives long-term sustainable growth. This category is vibrant and we see tremendous opportunities ahead, but it’s evident to reignite the user growth engine for our company in the long term. We need to take a firm stance towards delivering customer value that goes beyond this launch. We’re making the difficult but important decision to reset our strategy to deliver durable customer value by addressing two fundamental and interconnected challenges. First, we need to ensure we’re capturing the right balance and mix of people in our customer ecosystem. This entails correcting demographic imbalances and improving retention by providing our customers with more innovative and compelling dating experiences. And second, we need to monetize more effectively while ensuring a great experience for both our free and paid customers. To address these challenges, we have embarked upon a comprehensive plan that will help us achieve our ultimate goal of making Bumble the number one choice for people to find love, friendship, and community around the world. Our plan is focused on three important areas, ecosystem, the customer experience, and our revenue strategy. Let me detail each one of them. Our first area of focus is fostering a vibrant customer ecosystem. Our customers come to our app to meet people, so getting the right balance makes an intent of people in Bumble is fundamental to our success. Strengthening our ecosystem will result in better engagement, improve retention, and ultimately, deliver more successful outcomes to our customers. Our product choices going forward will increasingly favor ecosystem health and engagement on Bumble app. One example is prioritizing more robust profiles for all of our users. We know that creating detailed profiles and adding photos takes time and often causes friction, particularly during onboarding. However, we also know that quality profiles facilitate better engagement in greater customer success, particularly for women, which in turn also makes men’s experience better. This April launch gave us some evidence of that. By raising the bar on minimum requirements for new user profiles and photos, we drove immediate improvements to engagement metrics caused by a better experience and more engaged users in our ecosystem. While our efforts may turn away some lower engagement users in the near term, we believe this will ultimately result in a more authentic and better experience for our users over time. Achieving customer balance also involves updating our marketing playbook so that we can acquire the right users in each market. In mature markets where our brand recognition is strong, our focus will be on experiential and re-engagement marketing strategies. While in tier two and tier three cities, we’ll expand our brand and digital marketing campaigns. To better execute on these goals, we’re investing on marketing technology and data, including better analytics capabilities to effectively personalize how we reach our customers and optimize the ROI of our spend across different markets. Our second area of focus is customer experience, which begins with continuous product innovation. An area that I’m personally energized by and will be more directly engaged with our product and engineering team. We are working on the next chapters of the Bumble Apps evolution, and through the fall and early winter we’ll be launching several new features, including more options for making opening moves, new interest filters, improvements to our core matching algorithm, as well as customization to our chat timer. We will also introduce new AI-driven features, including an AI-assisted photo picker to ease the profile creation process and conversation support that will help our customers gain confidence to be their best selves. We have an ambitious view of how AI will enhance the value we deliver to our customers in each step of the dating journey for file creation, discovery, engagement, and the core of our matching models. Another essential part of customer experience is safety and support. Bumble has a strong foundation for safety and we’re doubling down on safety innovation. By expanding our efforts to crack down on bad actors, we move duplicate accounts and add government ID verification on Bumble app actions that may have a short-term impact on MAU but will result in better and safer user experiences. We’re also optimizing our operation to speed up support and safety resolution while improving our accuracy and quality of service. These initiatives are designed to ensure our customers know that they’re part of an ecosystem committed to safety and healthy connection. Our third area of focus is evolving our revenue strategy. We are reevaluating how we deliver value at every step of our customer’s journey. From the top of the funnel to peer conversion, while optimizing for LTV. Over time, we’ll rebalance Bumble subscription tiers and merchandising in favor of mechanisms that reward positive peer behaviors and support better ecosystem health. As part of this process, we’ll slow down certain monetization initiatives in the near term, including the expansion of premium plus. Being more deliberate about how we monetize in the near term does not mean that we see less growth opportunity. It means we’re treating unsustainable short-term growth in favor of better connecting customer experiences with long-term growth potential. We’ll also lean on areas of strength and where we see growth opportunities, including Badoo International expansion and adjacent opportunities like advertising. While the initiatives I’ve outlined have been primarily about enhancing Bumble apps, in reality they extend across our entire portfolio with the goal of building out our offerings to expand our TAM. Badoo has provided us with great proof points of how we orienting towards customer value is to better outcomes for them. In Q3, we’re planning to roll out brand updates and the re-architecture of the revenue strategy for Badoo with new subscription tiers that are designed to be more affordable and encourage higher engagement. And as I shared last quarter, Bumble is the connections company and we remain excited by the potential to expand into apps for non-romantic relationships. In July, we closed the acquisition of Geneva, a group and community app for people to connect based on shared interests. Geneva will meaningfully accelerate our opportunity and friendships and community space, and we’re working towards launching it more broadly later this fall, we have more to share in the coming quarters. In closing, our renewed and relentless focus on customers, it’s essential to unlocking further untapped growth in this category. I want to be clear that I do not take lightly the impact our decisions will have on the near-term growth, but I have high conviction that this is the right path for Bumble’s long-term value creation. I came to Bumble to innovate for our customers and help them find successful connections and relationships through our experiences, while we have a lot of work in front of us and energized and confident in our path forward and will keep you informed on our progress along the way. I want to thank the Bumble team for their incredible hard work and dedication, and I want to thank our customers for their trust in us as well as our partners and investors for their continued support. And with that, let me turn it to Anu.

Anuradha Subramanian: Thank you, Lidiane, and good afternoon everyone. I’ll walk you through our second quarter result and then share more perspective on our updated 2024 outlook. Unless stated otherwise, all comparisons are on a year-over-year basis. Total Bumble Inc. revenue grew 3% in Q2 to $269 million. FX headwinds totaled $3.4 million through our top line this quarter, and impacted on growth rate negatively by approximately 1.5 percentage points. Revenue growth was driven by total paying users, which grew 14% to $4.1 million, offset by an 8% decrease in our people to $21.37. Bumble app revenue grew 5% to $218 million, and fixed headwinds were approximately $2.5 million and impacted the growth rate negatively by one percentage point. Q2 growth was driven by a 15% increase in paying users to $2.8 million. On a sequential basis, we reported 87,000 paying user net ads with continuous strength in international markets. The increase in paying users was partially offset by a 9% year over year decline in our people owing to geographic mix shift. Our people continued to grow year over year within many individual markets, including the US. Badoo app and other revenue of $51 million declined 2% year over year. FX headwinds were approximately $1 million and in impact growth negatively by approximately two percentage points. We grew paying users by 12% to $1.3 million and Q2 net ads were 27,000. Our people declined 7% to $11.93. As a reminder, we began including contributions growth in Badoo app and other KPIs in Q4 of 2023. Turning now to expenses, we continue to operate with financial discipline and our second quarter operating expense leverage reflects the cost structured improvements we implemented earlier this year. Total GAAP operating cost and expenses were $217 million for the quarter down 9% year over year. And Q2 net earnings were $38 million compared to $9 million in the year ago period. The decline in cost was largely driven by a decrease in stock-based compensation expense related to headcount reduction, partially offset by one-time severance and related charges of approximately $3 million. On a non-GAAP basis, excluding stock-based compensation and other non-cash or non-recurring items. Total cost and expenses were $194 million up approximately 1% year-over-year. Q2 adjusted EBITDA of $75 million, that presented a margin of 28% and was up to 26% last year. Cost of revenue was $80 million and grew 6%. As a percentage of revenue, cost of revenue was 30% versus 29% in the year-ago period. In line with our expectations, selling and marketing expenses grew 5% to $67 million, representing 25% of revenue. Our spend was lower than anticipated, primarily due to lower marketing around our Bumble brand relaunch campaign. G&A expenses declined 9%, $27 million or 10% of revenue compared to $29 million or 11% of revenue last year. Product development expenses declined 17% to $20 million, representing 7% of revenue. Decline in product development expenses were primarily related to reduced employee costs. As a result of our (Indiscernible) action announced in February. Turning to the balance sheet, we ended the quarter with $287 million in cash and cash equivalent. Since, the inception of our repurchase program, we have returned $241 million to shareholders representing more than 125% of our free cash flow over that time. Year-to-date, our total share repurchase is $84 million, which represents more than 2.5 times our year-to-date free cash flow of $31 million. At the end of Q2, we had $209 million remaining on our $450 million total buyback authorization. Our strong balance sheet and profitability gives us the financial flexibility to continue returning cash to our shareholders. We remain very committed to our buyback program and continue to believe that buying back shares remains a very good use of our capital. Now moving on to our outlook for the rest of the year. We are intentionally resetting our outlook today to reflect the execution of the customer-focused strategy that Lidiane just outlined. In the process of strengthening our ecosystem and improving the customer experience, we plan to prioritize product and marketing investments that will improve engagement and ecosystem health, particularly in our more mature market. This will include expanding our efforts around safety and improving the mix and intent of customers on our app. In addition, as we align our revenue strategy to deliver broader customer value across all subscription tiers, we will also slow down certain monetization efforts like Premium Plus that we had originally planned for in the second half of the year. All of these factors in aggregate will impact our near-term top of funnel user growth and monetization, but we have high confidence that these are the necessary steps for us to reignite user growth, drive sustainable revenue, and capture customer value in the long term. We continue to be encouraged by the strength we are seeing in many of our international markets and expect healthy growth to continue in those in the second half. As a result, for Q3, we now expect total revenue between $269 million and $275 million, representing a year-over-year decline of 1% at the mid-point. Adjusted for FX headwind, revenue would be flat year-over-year. We expect Bumble app revenue to be between $217 million and $221 million, also representing a year-over-year decline of 1% at the midpoint. Adjusted for FX, Bumble app revenue will also be flat year over year. We expect Bumble app sequential net assets of approximately 40,000 to 50,000 in Q3. We estimate adjusted EBITDA will be between $77 million and $80 million, representing 29% margin at the midpoint of the range. For full-year 2024, we now expect total Bumble in revenue growth between 1% and 2%. We expect Bumble app revenue growth between 1.5% to 2.5% with full-year Bumble app net ads of approximately 275,000 to 285,000. This implies that we expect to see negative net ads in Q4 of this year. While this is partly driven by seasonality, it primarily reflects the actions I just outlined. Owing to our revised revenue growth outlook, we now expect full adjusted EBITDA margin expansion of at least 200 basis points year over year. Our outlook reflects the strong operating profitability of our business model, including the benefit of in year savings from our workforce reduction. That benefit has largely been realized as of today with a small incremental portion to come in Q3. We will continue to exercise operational and financial discipline and take an ROI focused approach to how we invest strategically for Bumble’s long-term growth in the critical areas that Lidiane outlined earlier. In summary, we see tremendous opportunity for Bumble Inc. We are making intentional choices today to align our strategy, execution and resources to capture the large long-term opportunity ahead of us. While the actions we are taking are difficult in the near term, we are in a healthy position financially as we execute, including our ability to drive strong cash flow while returning capital to our shareholders. And with that, I’ll turn it over to the operator for Q&A.

Operator: (Operator Instructions). Our first question comes from Andrew Marok with Raymond James. Your line is open. Please go ahead.

Andrew Marok: Thanks for taking my question. Maybe one on the 2Q results first and then one on the guide. So, given that your comments were that ARPPU is growing within many of your individual markets, with the overall ARPPU P decline driven largely by the geo mix shift, should we infer from that a decline in us paying users or can you help us provide any guardrails around the US versus international paying user or MAU dynamic?

Anuradha Subramanian: This is Anu, I’ll take that. Yes, I think as we uh mentioned on the call, we are seeing um overall our people decline for Bumble app. While individually in each of the markets, including the, US we are seeing ARPPU increase the weightage of the US versus international markets is having an impact on overall ARPPU. We are seeing some pressure on US top of the funnel metrics and that is flowing through to the pressure that we are seeing on US payers as well. And a lot of the actions that we are outlining today are effectively meant to really be focused on our more mature markets, especially the US.

Andrew Marok: And then maybe one on the product roadmap and the context of the guide. I’m sure the roadmap includes some things that are likely to be more impactful than others in terms of the UX and revenue trajectory. I guess, can you provide any further clarity on maybe timing for some of the more impactful moves, or just a sense of what groundwork needs to be laid in place product wise, before you start to turn on some of the more impactful features? Thank you.

Lidiane Jones: Thank you, Andrew. As we aligned on this strategy today, we are unveiling a customer-centric strategy to really set us up for reigniting growth in the long term. What this means from a product perspective is that we really optimizing for engagement, as you have heard from our April launch. We saw that improving the customer experience, especially women’s experience drove engagement, which takes longer to realize itself. And that’s the set of principles behind the releases and the features that you heard. Today, we are planning to release a series of capabilities, expansion of opening moves, expansion of intentions that will allow us to better align the experience of our customers and balance the ecosystem, immature markets as the new just called out. We do believe that these actions will improve the overall experience and retention of our customers, but it’ll take multiple quarters for us to start realizing, a top of funnel strength that we believe these capabilities will offer. We also as you heard today, are really, really focused on ensuring the quality of engagement and the intention of engagement of their users are there for all of our major markets. This has meant that what we started in the first chapter of Bumble in April in raising the bar for profile in quality of profiles on our product is going to expand with our AI photo picker for profile so that we can make more users look great on our platform and get the same level of engagement that we think will help drive overall growth and success of our metrics. So, the foundation of what we are delivering is great engagement, great profile creation, and increasing the experience bar in safety for women, which will in turn also make the experience great for men. What we’ll see is great customer focus from us, that’s really what the strategy is about, and we will start aligning our revenue model to that and see the revenue improvement over quarters.

Operator: We now turn to Cory Carpenter with JP Morgan. Your line is open. Please go ahead.

Cory Carpenter: I had two on Bumble off as well. Maybe Lidiane for you, could you talk about just at a high level, what you saw with the initial app you launch that made you decide now is the right time to make the pivot and reset the roadmap going forward? And then I was just hoping you could expand a bit. You talked about monetization mechanisms that reward positive user behavior, and what do you mean by that and what could that look like? Thank you.

Lidiane Jones: Great question, Corey. Thank you. So, what we certainly, you know, if we step back a little bit, this strategy isn’t just about this past quarter. It is a combination of factors, that’s weighed out on the areas of our plan. If you look at the top of funnel softness, that we’ve talked about this has been talked about from Bumble over several quarters. In the last few quarters, we have seen the steady pressure in our results. And what we saw from our April launch is that the engagement has immediately improving our customer experience, improved engagement. But it doesn’t translate immediately in revenue growth. In the past, sometimes a consumable will drive an immediate revenue but doesn’t sustain those users. And so, what we are really shifting is towards prioritizing product experiences that are going to drive long-term sustainable revenue growth. And so, what we are focused on is ensuring that the differentiation of what, why people choose to come to Bumble, which is women’s experience, it’s a safe, healthy platform for our users is undeniably the best one in the market. And so, a lot of what you’re going to see in our product roadmap is very focused on the differentiation along also with helping our customers be successful. People come here to meet great people. So, we want to have our healthy ecosystem balanced and innovate in our products to help our customers stay here and improve the top of funnel, which is ultimately our goal.

Operator: We now turn to John Blackledge with TD Cowen. Your line is open. Please go ahead.

John Blackledge: Two questions. You mentioned sales and marketing, so maybe some changes there. So, what with the reset, should we expect an increase in sales and marketing in the back half of the year as part of the year as part of the reset and perhaps to drive top of funnel? And then second question, you also mentioned slowing down the premium plus rollout. Could you give the rationale for this strategic change?

Lidiane Jones: Let me start. Josh on the marketing side, as you heard from Anu, we’re operating with a lot of discipline. We believe we have the right allocation of dollars. We are really focused on is how do we really optimize for LTV and we are being more tailored about our go to market strategies based on the level of maturity of the market. So, the markets where we have a greater penetration, we’re very, very focused on attracting users that are already aware of our brand. But we’re reigniting re-engagement, where our strategies for emerging markets are very different and digital and performance marketing are very effective. So, it’s really about optimizing and tailoring our marketing strategy for markets. I think that’s going to certainly drive an improvement to the performance of our investments. And that’s our focus. In terms of premium plus, I want to clarify that, we are just maintaining premium plus as it is today. We’re not changing it. What we are doing is really rebalancing the value of our subscriptions. We believe that before we overinvest in creating additional value for premium plus that it is really important that we land the free experience of being a great one and ensuring that we have a great value clarity across each one of our subscription tiers. That will in turn, improve the top of funnel, which helps every single metric. It improves in payers, payer conversion and ARPPU over time. So, it’s about rebalancing. We are maintaining premium plus in the market as it is, and our focus really is aligning the subscription tiers and value as we add more product capabilities in the next few quarters.

Anuradha Subramanian: And John, just to follow-up on the sales and marketing question. From a dollar perspective, we feel pretty good about the dollars that we have allocated for the second half. And as a percentage of revenue, you’ll actually see Q3. I think, we’ll spend a little bit less than what we spent in Q2, but in Q4, we do intend to take up marketing as a percentage of spend up again. Lidiane’s earlier point about making sure that we have the right strategies in terms of how to go to market. I think that’s really going to be our focus versus just spending more to get more users.

Operator: Our next question comes from Ygal Arounian with Citigroup. Your line is open. Please go ahead.

Ygal Arounian: I want to go back to the first point of three important areas. You talked about Lidiane, getting the right balance in the kind of customer ecosystem. You guys historically talked about your ecosystem was healthier, leans more towards women and the focus on the women’s experience has made a healthier ecosystem and it feels like that maybe has changed or something in the way you look at it has changed. And that’s leading to some of the product enhancements or changes you’re making here. Is that the case and can you just talk about that ecosystem and how it’s evolved and where it’s at right now?

Lidiane Jones: Yes, great question. So, let me unpack ecosystem a little bit. Bumble continues to be the best platform for women and it has been a great source of advantage for us. But as we scaled the business now, we are a billion-dollar business in several markets. There has been a slight imbalance that has been created, and it’s not just about gender balance. It is about intent, balance, it’s about the general mix of users and what they are looking for. So, we’re taking a more sophisticated look to that mix of users and engagement and intent, because that really will allow us to deliver the best possible experience to our users. That certainly is important for mature markets. As you’ve heard from both Anu and I today, our markets in the U.S. in particular are more mature. We have great brand recognition, great brand love, and it really is about tailoring how we’re delivering our experiences, how our customers are experiencing our products in their local markets. And that’s what, a big part of our shift is all about. We believe that’s really going to reignite the engine of user growth for us, but it’ll take us some time. It’s complex to get that mixed right and we want to do right by our customers.

Ygal Arounian: To follow up on that, I guess from last quarter, what look at the magnitude of the change in the full year guidance, is it possible to parse out what the impacts of the user and monetization? Changes are here the near-term trade-off versus the expectation of what the app refresh would deliver over the course of the year. So, like, how much is the new actions, how much of the app refresh not hitting on your expectations. Thanks.

Lidiane Jones: Yes, Al I can take that. So, if you take a step back, and you break down the guidance in terms of where we were a few months ago versus where we are today. I would say there are two main factors in terms of where we see things having changed. So, number one is around what we are seeing around top of the funnel trends. If you recall in our Q2 call, we had said that we were seeing some slowness in our top of the funnel. And as we went through Q2, and as we’ve entered Q3, we are seeing those trends continue. Now, we had planned for an improvement in these trends, coming out of the relaunch, but also due to the work that we were intending to do from a product and marketing perspective. So, this wasn’t just about what we had planned from a relaunch perspective, but this was around the product roadmap that we had for the second half of the year. Given the reset and the strategy that you’ve just heard about, a big part of our second half roadmap product focus is now much more around ecosystem health and making sure that the engagement metrics that we see are going to be healthy, which will absolutely lead to top of the funnel improvements. But Lidiane said that will take some time. And so that’s part of what is built into the reset of the revenue outlook. The second part of what we had built into our assumption around acceleration in the second half was around monetization from features such as premium plus that as you just heard about. We have now paused in — of some more fundamental work that we are doing around our revenue strategy and our revenue architecture. And I want to make it very, very clear that we still believe very strongly that there is a tremendous amount of opportunity in terms of payer conversion and monetization that is still ahead of us. If you compare payer penetration rates for us versus where you see where the market is, we still are lower than where you see the rest of the market, but we strongly believe that we need to do this fundamental re-architecture work to set us up for the growth that we know is ahead of us. So, if you add both of these together you get to the second half outlook that we’ve given today and you can get to the guidance numbers that we have.

Operator: Our next question comes from Mark Kelly with Stifel. Your line is open. Please go ahead.

Mark Kelly: I wanted to go back to kind of the question that Ygal asked, which is about the women-first strategy. And maybe not to put words in his mouth, but maybe a departure from that in some respects. And given that your main competitor has a bunch of initiatives aimed at women and trying to add different features and functionality for that cohort. I guess, how do we think about the future in terms of being able to differentiate yourself versus that competitor or others in the long run? When it seems like in the dating category, some of the apps are just kind of in some respects, converging in terms of functionality and messaging. That’s my first question. And the second one is you mentioned monetization through advertising on the platform. I guess how do you get that balance right between ad load and trying to make sure that your users are not churning away to competitors? Thanks very much.

Lidiane Jones: Thank you, Mark. First let me start with our strategy. As I said at the start of the earnings call today, Bumble was the first app that really focused on women at the center of our experiences. That continues to be the case today. We are not shifting our strategy because our fundamental belief is when women have a great experience dating everybody else does. And that’s the compass in which we’re setting this strategy, is that we are the best destination for women and we’re going to continue to be. So, what we’re really focused on is, it’s really important to make sure that not only our product innovation continues to deliver great experiences and safe experiences for women but also that in turn, we are delivering a great experience across the entire ecosystem. So, these measures that we’re discussing today are very much centered around what differentiates the inside of the part. So certainly, going to be the case, continue to be the case for us. With regards to advertising, we believe that our take here in advertisement is going to be very, very anchored on our customer-centric approach to product delivery. So, we believe there are important and strategic partnerships that will offer ad space to partners that are adding value to the beating journey to our customers. So, we’re going to be very selective and we’ll scale this over time, but we see tremendous opportunity revenue upside, but also added benefit to our customers in terms of their overall leading experience. So, it’s really about serving the end user and in their journey. There’s definitely upside both for our customers and for the revenue for our business, and that’s what we’re going to focus on.

Operator: We now turn to Curtis Nagle with Bank of America Merrill Lynch (NYSE:). Your line is open. Please go ahead.

Curtis Nagle: Just one for me. So, given the step down in the core business and the restructuring and reacceleration efforts taking longer than expected, does it make sense to pause or perhaps pull back on BFF and on romantic relationships at this point?

Lidiane Jones: Curt, great question. Our efforts with regards to friendship, especially as we closed the Geneva acquisition on July 1 is very much to give us an opportunity to be where our customers and consumers are. If you look at some of the sentiment, especially younger users as it relates to the category, their starting point is with community creation first. So, we believe it’s a very connected experience to the future of dating, it’s not separate. It’s an interrelated and very important generational dynamic that we want to be at the forefront of. So that is really the anchor point of power tackling, community and friendship development as an on-ramp to what will become how many of our users start their dating journey. So, we think it is an important message and it is appropriately sized to allow us to gradually grow. And I genuinely believe that there is tremendous, tremendous innovation and opportunity that we can deliver to the business in the long haul in this space.

Operator: Our next question comes from Nathan Feather with Morgan Stanley. Your line is open. Please go ahead.

Nathan Feather: Just digging a little bit more into the revenue deceleration, pulling back from mid-teens in 4Q to closer to flattish in the 3Q guide. Can you help us break down the buckets of this weakness between news or growth, retention and monetization? And then when it does come to the changes in the guidance in the back half, is it primarily just changes you are making on the platform and the shift in strategy? Or is there anything macro or consumer that we should be aware of? Thanks.

Anuradha Subramanian: So, if you think about the drivers of growth, Nate, obviously, we have top of the funnel metrics that include new users as well as reengage users that then sort of become active users on the platform. And then the work that we do to convert those users into paying users. And then the third piece of the puzzle is the work that we do around optimizing prices in each of the markets. As you heard from Lidiane, the thing that we’ve continued to see softness in now for a few quarters is on sort of the top of the funnel metrics. Reengage users continue to be strong for us. Where we are seeing weakness is on growth in new users. And like I said, again, the weakness is more predominantly felt in the US and in some of our mature markets. Our newer markets continue to be strong in terms of growth there. So, the new users is where we are seeing the most impact which is having an impact on the deceleration that you’re seeing in terms of revenue. And there was a second question, Nate, if you don’t mind…

Nathan Feather: Just is there anything in here that is macro environment…

Anuradha Subramanian: I mean as you can imagine, we are keeping a pretty close eye on the impact of just consumer sentiment and whatever we are seeing in the overall macro environment. We’ve certainly heard that users, especially younger users, are just more discerning with respect to them spend and are just keeping a closer eye on the amount of money that they’re spending on things. So, we are baking in some assumptions from the impact of that into our second half outlook. But again, it’s something that we are monitoring pretty closely as things change.

Operator: Our next question comes from Shweta Khajuria with Wolfe Research. Your line is open. Please go ahead.

Shweta Khajuria: Thank you for taking my question. I’ve got two, one is, what specifically is driving your confidence with this new strategy right now at this point in time? Is it some tests that you have run? You sound like this, you are confident this is the right strategy going forward, but what is really driving that confidence? And then the second is you’ve been seeing top of the funnel pressure now for several months, maybe a few quarters, especially in the United States. What in your opinion is driving that outside of just the product and user experience? Are you seeing more marketing competition? Are you seeing share shift for any particular reason? What do you — in your opinion, is driving that?

Lidiane Jones: So, let me start with the first part. First, I’m really confident that there is a lot of opportunity in this category. We are experiencing a time where users are more lonely than ever and it is our job in this category to really support connections overall. So, I am really excited about the opportunities ahead of the category overall. Now for us, if you look at the three parts of our plan that you saw today, there are a number of factors and data that have gotten us to this comprehensive plan with regards to ecosystem. We have tested and started some of this work in a number of markets, which has really allowed us to start separating the strategies that we want to have across ecosystems as I mentioned today. Our overall business is comprised of thousands of ecosystems. So, we’re able to really see the dynamics when we have the right balance of users in our marketplace. So, we’re really applying our learnings to define this roadmap and plan for ecosystem help across all of our markets. The second part is our product strategy, which we started earlier this year, one of our key learnings is even as we’ve raised the bar, for profile creation, it kept away some low-engagement users, and it drove a lot of success in engagement of women, healthier overall conversation across our users and we know that really drives the word of mouth. Customer success drives the engine of growth of mouth for this company. Certainly, it was a huge part of our early success. I still receive letters and stories of Bumble success throughout people’s lives. And that’s the core of what we want to get to our product innovation is deliver experiences that help people achieve successful outcomes in a delightful way. And so, we have a lot of great data insight and customer evidence that it’s the right thing to do. And the final thing that I shared today is our revenue plan. We started a revenue rebalancing for Badoo about 9 months ago. And the Badoo customer is more price sensitive. There’s some interesting dynamics and we’re taking some of the learnings there where we’ve rolled out in a number of markets already. What we’ve seen is, as we’ve clarified, we brought some greater value to the lower tiers it increased the conversion player conversion across our customers and Badoo, and we are seeing increased overall ARPPU because there’s a greater distribution so there’s just a lot of data points and learnings from Badoo that we’re going to be amplifying and expanding across bumble. So, we have built this plan with a lot of thought. And what I love the most about Bumble is we have a phenomenal brand. We have a loyal customer base. We have great IP, strong financial allow us to execute on that in a phenomenally talented team. So, we have all of the pieces of the puzzle here. And our number one drop at this point forward is execute because we believe it will not only drive growth — the growth engine again, but it set us up for success for years to come. Now you talked about top of funnel and the second part of your question was what have we noticed in terms of what’s driving that. And as we know with consumer companies, there’s always a numerous factor. Bumble has always been in a competitive segment and industry. So that hasn’t changed. It’s always evolving, of course and we pay attention to our competitors. But what we believe is the most important thing to reignite top of funnel is really getting the customer experience to be the best one in the market. And that’s what’s going to get us to be the number one choice for our customers because the other factors are always going to be evolving, and we will always be paying attention to them.

Operator: Our next question comes from Jian Li with Evercore ISI. Your line is open. Please go ahead.

Jian Li: Thanks for taking my question. So, a couple. First, just Lidiane, you talked about this reset could take a few quarters. How should we think about kind of the growth equation exiting this year into the next year? Like what should we look for as a leading indicator of success this reset. Should we see kind of a payer conversion improving top of funnel or ARPU kind of, I guess, recovery path? And second, just to double-click on Geneva, a pretty interesting acquisition. Can you just talk about the opportunity set there, both in terms of Geneva itself, but also, I think Geneva has a few kinds of community building features? Are you kind of considering leveraging these tech stack into your core apps? Any kind of product development around that, that would be great.

Lidiane Jones: On the first part, there are a number of metrics that we are monitoring really closely from consideration, top of funnel, all the way down to conversion and the RRPPU strength as you know. At this point, you’ve heard our guidance for the second half of the year. Our goal is to provide progress and updates to investors in the quarters ahead as we get more insight into our progress on this strategy. But our guidance is the information that we have to share today. With regards to Geneva, you are absolutely right. Geneva has community-based capabilities. It has healthy penetration of users in some core cities here in the US. And what’s exciting about the customers using Geneva is that they love it, first of all, and they’re doing what younger users want to do today, which is connecting with in-person with their local communities. With are running clubs, there are movie enthusiasts, and it’s vibrant. People can organize events they get to know each other and this is exactly what we believe is going to be a great growth of engine fraud in the long haul. So, we are planning to launch an updated version of Geneva this fall and start scaling it across our markets where we do have a footprint across the Bumble Inc. It’s a great way for us to engage with a broader set of users. So, opportunities to increase our TAM, it’s quite significant here but it’s going to be very grounded on our principles of great customer experience, great experience for women and safe space. But with any acquisition, it takes time to get it right. So, our goal is to launch it, scale it, gradually, and we’ll be learning what how to evolve and scale this business over the quarters ahead. It will take us some time, but we are very excited about the opportunity that they bring us. One final point. You did talk about the tech stack. Geneva built a fantastic tech stack. We’re very excited about how scalable it is. There are definitely technology and capabilities that we can take advantage across our portfolio, and that’s fundamentally how we’re operating as a company. I think that’s the key shift here, is that we are operating as a customer-centric portfolio company, and we can take the learnings, the technology, the best practices from all of our apps and apply to each other to accelerate growth for the portfolio as a whole, and Geneva certainly will play a role in that.

Operator: We now turn to Benjamin Black with Deutsche Bank. Your line is open. Please go ahead.

Benjamin Black: Thank you. Thank you for taking my question. So just a follow-up on sort the demographic and imbalance you spoke about. Can you just give us an example on exactly how you plan to resolve the imbalance there? Some practical examples. And then one on the recovery, I think the guide implies that revenue growth is going to be exiting a year in sort of a negative trajectory. So, I guess the question is how should we think about the shape of the recovery curve? Is this sort of a multi-year endeavor, or is it something that you could expect to see quicker sort of reversals in the KPIs? Thank you.

Anuradha Subramanian: Let me start with the first part. So, the first part is unpacking ecosystems and the imbalance. As I shared earlier, we’re really looking at the balance in a multifaceted way. It is ensuring that we have a mix of intent of users of backgrounds, of different generations, all of that has a big role in ensuring that when someone gets to bumble, they find the connection that they’re looking for. And it’s ensuring that a broad set of users will give us more flexibility to help people find each other. And ensuring that also as we talked about today, that we have highly engaged, aligned in intention in our ecosystem. So, I’ll give you an example in terms of some of the techniques. There are product techniques, there are marketing techniques, there are revenue techniques. From a product one, as you heard from us today, we’ve raised the bar in our April launch on profile creation. So, users need to add more photos, they have to have more information that has increased — we increased our retention or engagement of our users but it kept away some low engagement users. That had an impact on the number of people that kind of passed through the funnel. And so that has a balance impact of a revenue impact but has a longer-term positive impact to the success of the company. In terms of marketing, there are many different user acquisitions, strategies and marketing, and we can really use it as a core lever to bring the right users in. So, we are going to look at the makeup of our mature markets and our emerging markets and ensure that we’re applying the right techniques whether it’s performance marketing, whether it’s experiential, whether it’s very tailored to a particular audience, it will be very specific and personalized to the market that we’re playing in. And then from a revenue perspective, promotions and many other pricing techniques can also ensure that the right users are coming into the product. So, we are really looking at these three pillars to ensure that the right people are making it to our ecosystem and that they’re successful in our product. I think that was the full makeup of your question, hopefully, I got it right. Journey for recovery. At this — as I shared earlier, we are — what I’m most confident about is that we have built a plan that is aggressively and urgently looking at every aspect of our business from the makeup of our customers to our innovation to our revenue, and we are moving as quickly as we can. But a plan like this takes time, and we’re favoring bringing in sustainable revenue to the business because that’s going to set us up for long-term success. We are going to share progress in the quarters ahead, but don’t have any additional time line to share as of today.

Operator: Our next question comes from Ken Gawrelski with Wells Fargo. Your line is open. Please go ahead.

Ken Gawrelski: Just a couple, please. First, could you talk a little bit about the significant restructure you did earlier this year. Is there any — as you think about that in light of kind of the reset on strategy and the reinvestment phase here, did that in any way set you up in a more difficult place? Or do you find that the investments you need to make are in different areas with different type of staff, et cetera, with different capabilities. So that maybe is my first question. The second question is maybe a broader one, which is the public markets tend to be relatively hospitable to transition stories with kind of uncertain time frames. I know you’ve answered this question in kind of multiple ways, but maybe just more directly, how should we just think about time frames in terms of how you will evaluate the success of kind of the transition here. And anything you can tell us in terms of public milestones? I know you have the second half guidance, but anything you can help us just even if it’s not quantitative, more qualitative public milestones. Thank you.

Lidiane Jones: Thank you for the question. So, on the restructuring part, as you know, in the first half of the year, we restructured about 30% of our workforce and the principles behind the restructuring was about agility and ensuring that we were optimally organized to execute as a company. I feel really good about where we are. We don’t have any additional restructuring plans. We are well set up, and we have the right talent in our organization to go execute. That was a necessary and important set of actions that we took to put us in a position where we can execute on our strategy and we are well to do that. So, I feel really good about where we are at the company and as a team. And in terms of what remained our lookout and you don’t have a specific time line to share today, which I know is not very satisfying. But there’s a few areas that we’re going to be evaluating. But on the ecosystem side, as we mentioned, the balance of the ecosystem is going to be a key metric that we’re going to be looking at internally. And there’s many details in the submetrics to those. And what we have learned based on tests that we’ve done is that it takes different windows of time to create a balanced space on the market. what we’re going to be looking at in the quarters ahead is the velocity and the effectiveness of the different techniques that I talked about just before your question. The second factor is we have important product deliverables from the fall through the winter, and we are going to be looking at engagement and retention. And that certainly will play a role in helping us understand how the users that are in your ecosystem can be monetized. And on our revenue, we architecture, part of what we’re going to be testing across many markets is the right balance of revenue value creation and revenue extraction out of the value. So, as we give more experiences to our users, what’s monetizable, how quickly can we realize that set of revenue? So, we’re going to be learning a lot in terms of velocity of the different techniques and different markets. As Anu said, in emerging markets, we are seeing strength, and we’re going to continue to invest in those in the near term. But some of our more different (ph) markets will take a little bit longer. Our goal is to provide progress along the way and be transparent with the investor community as much as we can.

Operator: Ladies and gentlemen, that’s all the time we have for our Q&A and today’s Bumble Second Quarter 2024 Financial Results. We’d like to thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect your lines.

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