The News: Salesforce (NYSE: CRM) reported its Q4 and full year 2022 earnings on March 1, including record revenue for the quarter of $7.33 billion and record revenue for fiscal full year 2022 of $26.49 billion.
This is the first reporting quarter for Salesforce since the company named former COO Bret Taylor to serve as Co-CEO alongside company founder Marc Benioff back on Nov. 30, 2021.
Here is a quick breakdown of the important numbers:
Read the full Salesforce earnings report here.
Analyst Take: Another quarter, another fiscal year, and yet another strong or record quarter for the Salesforce CRM juggernaut. That is how things have been going for this company for a long time, and we believe there is nothing to slow that trajectory changing anytime soon.
The latest Salesforce Q4 per share earnings impressively outperformed analyst estimates – 84 cents per share reported compared to 74 cents expected, according to Refinitiv. Salesforce Q4 revenue also exceeded Refinitiv estimates, coming in at $7.33 billion compared to a Refinitiv estimate of $7.24 billion.
These are satisfactory results and indicative of a continuing positive direction and strategy by Salesforce and its experienced and forward-looking executive team.
In his commentary, Co-CEO Marc Benioff called out that next year Salesforce would be leaving the “20” billions for good and head into the “30” billions. This, of course, coincides with the aggressive growth plans that Benioff has laid out over the past few years. We had pegged this continued growth as more than achievable based upon the steady growth rate of the core businesses along with the bold acquisitions that included Tableau and Slack.
Salesforce saw strong earnings performance in both its subscription and support revenue and in its professional services and other revenue units for the quarter and the year.
Again, these are impressive results, and Salesforce continues to find new ways to bring new services and new value to its existing and new customers as it grows its user base and earnings. As we have seen over the past few years, the growth of the core businesses including Sales and Services remained in the lower double digits while the Platform, Analytics, and Marketing clouds all grew at a faster clip.
Over the past few years we have maintained a bullish outlook on the continued revenue diversification by Salesforce moving beyond its core businesses and the significant investment in its platform.
Based upon the rapid growth and adoption of Salesforce Platform and the opportunity the company has to compete with Microsoft Team’s for the next workspace, we also see the company’s $27 billion bet on Slack paying off once it fully realizes its vision of the Digital HQ.
Also noteworthy was the strong growth in Europe which came in well over 30%. It’s always encouraging to see strong market diversification showing adoption strength in secondary markets outside of the U.S.
We believe that the future looks promising for Salesforce as it continues to serve and grow its customer base in a world that is still working to return to some semblance of normal after two years of the devastating COVID-19 pandemic. The pandemic-inspired move to work from home certainly helped Salesforce increase its sales and services as customers quickly embraced and incorporated deeper digital transformations due to the crisis—something the company was incredibly well designed to support.
Onlookers will need to continue to watch the company’s growth in its emerging technology areas like Platform and Analytics to get a better sense of its long-term prospects. While stable growth in the core businesses should be acceptable, that is only the case if its diversified revenue segments continue to accelerate.
A nice hybrid of growth and value is really what Salesforce has become. Still an innovator that is breaking revenue records, but also a robust recurring revenue machine making big bets in its products, services, and acquisitions. In the end, it would be hard to think these bets won’t payoff. Now we just need to see what the company comes up with when it takes its alleged NFT cloud public.
Disclosure: Futurum Research is a research and advisory firm that engages or has engaged in research, analysis, and advisory services with many technology companies, including those mentioned in this article. The author does not hold any equity positions with any company mentioned in this article.
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The original version of this article was first published on Futurum Research.
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