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ServiceTitan Inc. (TTAN) reported strong earnings for the third quarter of 2025, significantly surpassing earnings per share (EPS) expectations and driving a positive market response. The company posted an EPS of $0.24, exceeding the forecasted $0.15, marking a 60% surprise. This performance, alongside a 25% year-over-year increase in total revenue to $249.2 million, led to a 2.44% rise in the stock price during after-hours trading, reaching $93.85.
Key Takeaways
- ServiceTitan’s EPS exceeded forecasts by 60%, highlighting robust financial health.
- Total revenue increased by 25% year-over-year, driven by strong subscription and usage revenues.
- The stock price rose by 2.44% in after-hours trading, reflecting investor confidence.
- The company launched several AI-driven innovations, enhancing its competitive edge.
- ServiceTitan’s guidance for Q4 2025 and fiscal year 2026 suggests continued growth.
Company Performance
ServiceTitan demonstrated strong performance in Q3 2025, with total revenue reaching $249.2 million, a 25% increase compared to the same period last year. The company continues to benefit from its leadership in trades software, with significant contributions from subscription and usage revenues. The introduction of AI-enhanced tools and a focus on enterprise-level solutions have positioned ServiceTitan well against industry competitors.
Financial Highlights
- Revenue: $249.2 million, up 25% year-over-year
- Subscription Revenue: $182.8 million, up 26% year-over-year
- Usage Revenue: $56.8 million, up 24% year-over-year
- Gross Transaction Volume: $21.7 billion, up 22% year-over-year
- Platform Gross Margin: 80.2%, increased by 310 basis points year-over-year
- Operating Income: $21.5 million, 8.6% margin, up 780 basis points year-over-year
- Free Cash Flow: $38 million, up from $11 million in the previous year
Earnings vs. Forecast
ServiceTitan reported an EPS of $0.24, significantly above the forecasted $0.15, resulting in a 60% earnings surprise. This marks a notable improvement compared to previous quarters, indicating strong operational execution and financial management.
Market Reaction
Following the earnings release, ServiceTitan’s stock rose by 2.44% in after-hours trading, reaching $93.85. This movement reflects positive investor sentiment, supported by the company’s strong financial results and strategic initiatives. The stock remains below its 52-week high of $131.33 but has shown resilience in the current market environment.
Outlook & Guidance
ServiceTitan provided guidance for Q4 2025, with expected total revenue between $244 million and $246 million. For the full fiscal year 2026, the company forecasts revenue between $951 million and $953 million. The company continues to focus on expanding its AI-driven automation and enhancing its commercial and construction market offerings.
Executive Commentary
CEO Ara Mahdessian emphasized the company’s pivotal position in the trades market, stating, "We are operating at a turning point for the trades." David Fitzinger, CIO of the Wrench Group, highlighted the potential of new solutions, saying, "Solutions like Dispatch Pro are able to run thousands of scenarios with complex variables."
Risks and Challenges
- Economic Uncertainty: Macroeconomic pressures could impact consumer spending and service demand.
- Competitive Pressure: The evolving landscape of trades software may increase competition.
- Integration Challenges: Successfully integrating acquisitions like Conduit is crucial for sustained growth.
- Supply Chain Issues: Potential disruptions could affect product delivery and operational efficiency.
- Regulatory Changes: New regulations in the trades industry could impact ServiceTitan’s operations.
Q&A
During the earnings call, analysts focused on the pilot phase of the MAX program, the company’s growth strategy in the commercial market, and the role of AI as a key differentiator. ServiceTitan’s management reiterated its commitment to leveraging AI for operational excellence and market expansion.
Full transcript - ServiceTitan Inc (TTAN) Q3 2026:
Conference Operator: Good day, everyone, and welcome to ServiceTitan’s first third-quarter 2026 earnings conference call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. After the speaker’s presentation, there will be a question-and-answer session. To participate, you will need to press star 11 on your telephone. You will then hear a message advising your hand is raised. To withdraw your question, simply press star 11 again. Please note that this conference is being recorded. Now, it’s my pleasure to turn the call over to the Vice President of Investor Relations, Jason Rechel. Please go ahead.
Jason Rechel, Vice President of Investor Relations, ServiceTitan: Thank you, Operator, and welcome everyone to ServiceTitan’s fiscal third-quarter 2026 earnings conference call. With me are ServiceTitan’s co-founder and CEO, Ara Mahdessian, co-founder and President, Vahe Kuzoyan, and CFO, Dave Sherry. During today’s call, we will review our fiscal third-quarter 2026 results. We’ll also discuss our guidance for the fourth fiscal quarter and full fiscal year 2026. Before we get started, we want to draw your attention to the safe harbor statement included in today’s press release and emphasize that information discussed on this call, including our guidance, is based on information as of today and contains forward-looking statements that involve risks, uncertainties, and assumptions. All statements other than statements of historical fact could be deemed to be forward-looking. Forward-looking statements reflect our views only as of today, and except as required by law, we undertake no obligation to update or revise these forward-looking statements.
Please take a look at our filings with the SEC for a discussion of the factors that could cause our results to differ. We also want to point out that we present non-GAAP measures in addition to, and not as a substitute for, financial measures prepared in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. Definitions of these non-GAAP financial measures, along with reconciliations to our GAAP financial measures, are included in our earnings release, which we’ve furnished with the SEC and is available on our website at investors.servicetitan.com. Unless otherwise stated, all references on this call to platform gross margin, total gross margin, operating income, operating margin, free cash flow, and related growth rates are on a non-GAAP basis. Finally, we’ve posted an updated investor presentation that can be found on the Investor Relations website at investors.servicetitan.com, along with a replay of this call.
And with that, let me turn the call over to Ara. Ara?
Ara Mahdessian, Co-Founder and CEO, ServiceTitan: Thank you, Jason, and thank you for joining us. Next week, we’ll mark the one-year anniversary of our IPO and the second annual Day of the Trades. As I reflect on this milestone and our progress over the past year, I am deeply humbled by how well Titans have shown up to deliver exceptional value to our customers. While we’ve come a long way together, I have also never been more confident that our opportunity to build the operating system for the trades is only just beginning. Our growth formula today remains the same as ever. We deliver real ROI to our customers, helping them reach even greater financial outcomes, and this allows them to grow their businesses, which drives more technicians and GTV on our platform and leads to higher subscription and usage revenue for us.
As they realize the value of our software, they buy more pro products, which further drives our growth. This growth formula is now compounded by our opportunity to democratize AI for the trades. During the third quarter, year over year, we delivered 26% subscription revenue growth and 25% total revenue growth with record free cash flow. Our overall financial performance was greater than we expected due to steady execution with both new and existing customers and strength in usage revenue. The breadth of performance against each of our main priorities this year, exciting momentum coming out of our annual user conference, and then expanding scope for ServiceTitan to bring automation to the trades all continue to underscore our opportunity to transform the lives of every hardworking contractor.
I want to talk this quarter about the Wrench Group, one of the largest operators in the trades with more than 7,000 employees serving over 2.5 million end customers annually across multiple trades and 14 states. The Wrench Group, backed by high-profile leaders in private equity, is one of our longest-tenured customers and has embedded our software as a standard operating system at the core of its operations. But the world is evolving, and Wrench Group’s new Chief Information Officer, David Fitzinger, responsible for technology across the org, now says they are thinking about the ServiceTitan platform differently than in the past. As Wrench looks at acquisitions, for example, companies already on the ServiceTitan platform ease the inherent complexity of integrating targets. And that’s in concert with changing principles as the business seeks to unlock silos and incorporate enterprise thinking.
Fitzinger told me, "We want to unlock best practices at an enterprise level, allowing us to tap into the strength, reporting, and consistency across the org without infringing on the economy and entrepreneurial spirit of our locations." And ServiceTitan is at the core of what we want to do and provides us with a platform to execute. This size and enterprise scale are believed to be accelerating differentiators in the world of AI. Fitzinger told me that he believes leveraging an integrated ecosystem of technology allows organizations to thrive by creating comparative advantages and differentiated customer outcomes. And he believes that ServiceTitan has formed the industry’s best ecosystem critical to lasting organizational growth. As part of its enterprise-level strategy, Wrench Group recently rolled off of a horizontal marketing platform to leverage the purpose-built capabilities of Marketing Pro.
The usability, scalability, simplicity, and consistency across locations are exactly what a trades business like ours requires," said Fitzinger. "And we also now have 99% of our locations using Scheduling Pro, which feels like table stakes as we make it easy for customers to do business with us." And as you’d expect to hear from a world-class executive, Wrench is playing offense with AI, putting the customer experience at the forefront by leveraging AI voice agents in the contact center, a natural language interface to enhance the in-home experience, and most importantly, by leveraging predictive analytics. Fitzinger wrapped up by telling me that, "Solutions like Dispatch Pro are able to run thousands of scenarios with complex variables and considerations to ensure the right person or the right action is taken at the right time, which humans simply cannot do.
And this only enhances the customer experience because if you have great data, great processes, great tools, and the right culture, AI will be an accelerant for your business." As I shared at Pantheon last month, we’re operating at a turning point for the trades. Leveraging the foundation of workflow that happens in ServiceTitan with the compelling benefits of AI, we are now giving our customers the opportunity to rethink how they operate. ServiceTitan has an entrenched and expanding ecosystem, compounding proprietary datasets, and industry-specific benchmarking that allow us to deliver differentiated, automated outcomes. Our customers are phenomenal operators with an opportunity to thrive in their industry compared to those that aren’t leveraging automation to the fullest extent possible. We hold ourselves accountable to delivering focused execution measured over a series of quarters, years, and decades.
I am proud of where we are today, and as always, I believe we’re only just beginning. I’ll now pass it to Vahe, who will share more details on our progress.
Vahe Kuzoyan, Co-Founder and President, ServiceTitan: Thanks, Ara. Titans delivered for our customers this quarter, and the excitement coming out of Pantheon has been notable. It has never been a more exciting time for contractors in the trades. Let’s start again with enterprise. We had a strong quarter of new large customer wins, and we continued to see successful go-live activity across large commercial and residential customers. A busy quarter of product execution was headlined by a range of new functionality, from centralized feature configurations to Benchmark Plus to adaptive capacity tailored to the needs of sophisticated operators. We were excited to go live with Galaxy Service Partners, a newly formed alliance of commercial, door, gate, and access control companies. Galaxy is led by the team behind Guild Garage, underscoring the standardization of ServiceTitan across the expanding private equity ecosystem in the trades. Our pro products continue to be our largest driver of subscription revenue growth.
This quarter, we introduced Field Pro, the next evolution of Sales Pro that extends AI to technicians in the field, and we released virtual agents across the entirety of our pro portfolio. Our pro product strategy has evolved from delivering powerful, functional business automations to delivering a comprehensive platform for agents to automate work across the trades. At the center of these agentic workflows is Atlas, which forges the raw power of modern large language models directly into the foundational intelligence of ServiceTitan. Atlas is the agentic command center capable of delivering something to trades businesses that only ServiceTitan can deliver: deep comprehension of data and workflow coupled with a system to automatically action outcomes. This agentic workflow and interface is at the center of our new MAX program.
We believe MAX is indicative of the potential evolution of ServiceTitan that will make it increasingly accessible, powerful, and valuable for our customers to automate their businesses at scale. In commercial, our multi-year investments are delivering increasingly strong results with our focus now on becoming market standard. This quarter, we introduced our commercial CRM and construction management capabilities, which are the final components to fully form ServiceTitan’s end-to-end commercial platform. We’re focused on empowering commercial contractors to drive revenue growth, increase productivity, optimize cash flow, and deliver improved margins across the entire scope of subcontractor workflow. We had the opportunity to partner this quarter with James River Air Conditioning, one of Virginia’s most trusted HVAC, plumbing, and electrical contractors for over 50 years. James River is a hybrid residential and commercial business.
I’ve been personally working to meet their business needs for nearly a decade, but our commercial service agreements, equipment management, and project management capabilities could not meet the James River standards until now. I am personally committed to delivering clear ROI to James River over the next decade, including with roofing, where we continue to make good progress defining our go-to-market motion, maturing our implementation playbook, and building on our key insurance and estimating features. We announced a partnership with Verisk to allow contractors to load their ServiceTitan data into Verisk’s Xactimate Claims Management System to review, validate, and complete the claims estimating process. We were excited to go live this quarter with Timeproof and Master Roofing, a residential and commercial roofing consolidator, to execute on plans to scale to 50 branches across 30 states within the next year.
Timeproof and Master Roofing selected ServiceTitan because they see us as the operating platform that allows for a centralized operating model to grow so quickly and the only software platform capable of delivering the workflows, integrations, data visibility, and reporting that are required for the roofing industry. The resilient execution by our existing customers and the conversion of new customers in existing and new trades are a testament to both our current strengths and future opportunity. As Ara said upfront, we intend to deliver on our mission with focused execution. With that said, I’ll turn it over to Dave to run through the financials. Dave? Thanks, Vahe. I’m proud of our execution on each of our main priorities this quarter. Today, I’ll run you through Q3 financial results in detail and provide guidance for Q4 and for the full fiscal year 2026.
For more detailed financial results, please refer to our press release issued earlier today. Q3 gross transaction volume, or GTV, was $21.7 billion, representing 22% year-over-year growth. Our customers are performing well, again, demonstrating the durability and diversity of the markets we serve, coupled with the ROI that ServiceTitan delivers. Our GTV continues to be distributed across a diverse set of trades and end markets. Within residential, it is primarily driven by break/fix and essential services for existing homes rather than new home construction. Since our GTV is tied directly to end consumer sales, it is generally insulated from supplier inventory cycles. In the quarter, GTV growth was led by commercial, and within residential, we saw relatively consistent growth in both HVAC and other trades as compared to Q3 of the prior year. Now, onto our financials. Q3 total revenue of $249.2 million grew 25% year-over-year.
Subscription revenue of $182.8 million grew 26% year-over-year, led by strong growth in pro, commercial, and new trades. Usage revenue grew 24% year-over-year to $56.8 million, outpacing our expectations due to higher-than-expected fintech utilization. Total platform revenue for Q3, the sum of subscription and usage revenue, grew 25% year-over-year to $239.6 million. Q3 professional services revenue was $9.6 million. Net dollar retention was greater than 110% for the quarter. Q3 platform gross margin was 80.2%, an improvement of 310 basis points year-over-year. As a reminder, roughly 200 basis points of this improvement resulted from the allocation of certain customer success expenses to sales and marketing. Total gross margin for Q3 was 74.3%, up 390 basis points year-over-year. Q3 operating income of $21.5 million resulted in an operating margin of 8.6%, an improvement of 780 basis points year-over-year.
While we continue to pace ahead of our incremental margin goals, we’re making steady progress on our R&D priorities and hiring plans. Q3 free cash flow was a record $38 million, up from $11 million for the prior year third quarter. Year-to-date, free cash flow was $50 million, up from $5 million in the prior year period. As seen in our cash flow statement, we paid approximately $20 million in cash for the acquisition of Conduit, which closed in October. Conduit has a cross-sell opportunity within our residential HVAC customer base, and we see opportunity in other trades over time. A few quick model notes before formal guidance. As we shared with you last year, Q4 of FY25 was an unusually strong quarter, driven by faster-than-normal customer expansion and some one-time subscription items.
Additionally, Q4 of this year will have one fewer business day as compared to the year-ago period, which is expected to compress Q4 FY26 GTV and usage revenue growth by approximately 150 basis points. We will then see the benefit of one additional business day in Q1 of FY27. Now, shifting to formal guidance. For the fourth quarter, we expect total revenue in the range of $244-$246 million. We expect to generate operating income in the range of $16-$17 million. For the full year fiscal 2026, we expect total revenue in the range of $951-$953 million. We expect to generate operating income in the range of $83-$84 million. We deliver sustainably high ROI to our customers who operate in resilient trades that keep our economy running.
Our goal remains to durably compound growth over many years while increasing margins at the same time. We see healthy performance this quarter as further evidence that our strategy to become the operating system for the trades is working. With that, I will turn the call back to the operator for Q&A. Operator?
Ara Mahdessian, Co-Founder and CEO, ServiceTitan: Actually, I’d love to invite Kash Rangan from Goldman Sachs to ask our first question. Today is Kash’s final ServiceTitan conference call prior to his January retirement after a very esteemed career. Kash, you’ve been an incredible partner over the years. We admire your brilliant mind. We admire the content of your character, and we are deeply grateful for everything you’ve done in partnership with us, and all of us at ServiceTitan are wishing you all the best, Kash.
Conference Operator: Thank you so much. One moment for Kash.
Kash Rangan, Analyst, Goldman Sachs: Thank you, Jason.
Conference Operator: Your line is open right now. Go ahead.
Kash Rangan, Analyst, Goldman Sachs: Excellent. Can you hear me okay? Thank you. It’s very lovely of you, Ara, Vahe, Dave, Jason, team. You guys will always be special. I really don’t have a question, but I have an observation. Maybe I can partly let it into a question. You’ve come a long way. You’ve been the titans of the trade, or let’s call it the Mavericks that defied conventional wisdom, that you could actually create a billion-dollar run-rate business, although not in the Q3, but I’m sure if you look at the month of November, you probably hit a billion-dollar revenue run-rate.
So coming as far as you have, and when you look at the road ahead, as you start to imprint the go-to-market motion in 2026 and beyond, Ara and team, what are you going to be doing differently as you iterate and try to get to that scale of being truly a multi-billion-dollar revenue company in the years ahead? What are the latest observations going into calendar 2026 as to how you gear maybe the go-to-market maybe a little bit differently to achieve the ambitious goals that are ahead of you? And my very, very best to you guys.
Ara Mahdessian, Co-Founder and CEO, ServiceTitan: Thank you, Kash. Our goal has always been to build the operating system for the trades in one that impacts as many contractors as possible and for each one to the greatest extent as possible. And we believe that the combination of those two things translates into the direct revenue opportunity for us. And the biggest opportunity that we see relates to AI in the trades. It’s a very exciting and critical opportunity for us. It is why it is our number one priority and why Vahe and I are directly leading the effort to make sure that we and our customers win. Ultimately, customers want one platform that fully automates all of their key workflows and ultimately optimizes for revenue and profits for them.
And this is the essence of the MAX program that we announced at Pantheon with a pilot with 50 customers, with hundreds more in the backlog. Because for us, customers have told us that they don’t want to set up and manage lots of different AI point solutions. They don’t want to deal with different point solutions interfering with one another. They don’t want to optimize locally for things like leads or call booking rates. These are all imperfect proxies for what they really care about, which is revenue and profit. And in a world where trades businesses have finite capacity, they want to optimize for generating the leads that are most likely to result in the highest revenue or optimize for booking the calls that represent the highest revenue potential. And so the future of work in the trades, for us, it’s not a set of AI point solutions.
It’s about connecting calls to appointments, to sales, to inventory, to payroll, and in a way that maximizes revenue and profit. And this is the foundation of the MAX program and the next evolution of ServiceTitan. And we have distinct both product and go-to-market advantages to be the winning solution. We have the largest proprietary dataset. We’re the system of action. We’re the primary UI where customers manage their entire business. We have the distribution and so on. But it will require intense execution. And so that is why Vahe and I and our teams are working like dogs and we’re maniacally focused on this to guarantee success for our customers and ultimately for us.
Kash Rangan, Analyst, Goldman Sachs: Absolutely fantastic, and I’m going to be watching from the sidelines this evolution of this vision ahead. Congratulations. Thank you so much.
Conference Operator: Thank you, Kash.
Kash Rangan, Analyst, Goldman Sachs: Thank you, Kash.
Conference Operator: Our next question comes from Josh Baer with Morgan Stanley. Please proceed.
Josh Baer, Analyst, Morgan Stanley: Great. Thank you for the question. I actually just wanted to follow up on the MAX program, wondering how the pilot is progressing early on. And wondering, what’s the current time to deploy and implement MAX and anything that you can do to either speed that up? And just wondering when we could expect the program to open up more broadly to that backlog of customers and your overall customer base.
Ara Mahdessian, Co-Founder and CEO, ServiceTitan: Sure. So we’re still early days on the MAX program, and we are intentionally slow-rolling it to make sure we get it right. Our focus is primarily on making sure that every participant in the MAX program is wildly successful, and so the progress is strong. We’re pretty happy with the results so far, but we are still in the phase of validating everything within the initial cohort, and we’ll be opening it up hopefully soon.
Josh Baer, Analyst, Morgan Stanley: Okay. Got it. And if I could just follow up, wondering if you could shed some light on what you’re seeing from private equity, where we are as far as contribution to current customer wins, growth contribution from private equity kind of as a channel, and if you’d expect that to change looking ahead?
Dave Sherry, CFO, ServiceTitan: Sure. Josh, I’ll take this one. As we shared at Pantheon, our private equity customers are our best utilizers of the product. They adopt pro products to a greater degree, and they grow on average 500 basis points faster than non-sponsored-backed customers. So they remain an important growth factor for us, and we don’t have any reason to believe that that’s slowing down.
Josh Baer, Analyst, Morgan Stanley: Okay. Awesome. Thanks.
Conference Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from D.J. Hynes with Canaccord. Please proceed.
D.J. Hynes, Analyst, Canaccord: Hey, guys. I need a few more decades to make as much money as Kash or to have the impact that he did, so I’m going to keep working. Ara, when you look across the customer base, where would you say the average ratio of technicians to back office staff is today? And where do you think it could go over time? And maybe as part of that, it’d be great to get your thoughts on what that efficiency unlock might mean for ServiceTitan.
Ara Mahdessian, Co-Founder and CEO, ServiceTitan: Great question. It will vary across trades. It will also vary across size. So you will have contractors that’ll have two technicians, the one back office. You’ll have really efficient ones that get above two technicians per back office. But then you also have trades businesses that have something closer to one-to-one. But I think it’s incredible to see the alignment in vision with our customer base where they believe in this vision that you have the ownership, and then you have the technicians in the field doing the work, and you try and bring as much efficiency and automation to everything in between because they see that as you automate, you not only increase profitability, but you actually increase revenue because a lot of these AI automations help increase close rates, average tickets, lead generation, and the like.
Having higher profit margins helps you be able to spend more on customer acquisition and grow the business.
D.J. Hynes, Analyst, Canaccord: Yeah. Yeah. Makes sense. And then, Dave, one for you on the guidance. So at this time last year, you guided Q4 to be sequentially flat to modestly up. This year, you’re actually guiding Q4 to be down a bit sequentially. You talked about some of the dynamics with the one fewer day, and obviously, the Q4 guidance was above consensus. I know you’re trying to keep targets conservative. But is there anything you’re seeing in the business that would lead you to be a bit more cautious this year versus last year?
Dave Sherry, CFO, ServiceTitan: Hey, D.J. First, our strong Q3 put us in the fortunate position here to raise our forecast for the rest of the year. As you noted, typically, GTV and usage will sequentially moderate from Q3 heading into Q4. I don’t think we expect this year to be any different. And as always, our assumptions continue to be driven by a prudent GTV forecast. So nothing out of the ordinary here, D.J.
D.J. Hynes, Analyst, Canaccord: Yeah. Okay. That’s what I wanted to hear. Thank you.
Conference Operator: Thank you. One moment for our next question that comes from the line of Dylan Becker with William Blair. Please proceed.
Josh Baer, Analyst, Morgan Stanley: Hey, gentlemen. Really appreciate it. Maybe for Vahe, I know Ara talked about kind of the value of the ecosystem, but you also called out with the initiative around roofing, the partnership with Verisk. Wondering how you’re kind of thinking about diversifying and broadening out the broader partner ecosystem, but maybe what that in particular unlocks around the insurance side, working with kind of the exterior trades as you’re thinking about continued expansion into that domain or that realm? Thanks.
Ara Mahdessian, Co-Founder and CEO, ServiceTitan: Yeah. So as part of our efforts around roofing, the current areas where we’re focusing our efforts are primarily around insurance-based roofing workflows and the partnership with Verisk is obviously an important part of that. As we look ahead, we think that the insurance integrations will likely have applicability to other trades like water damage restoration and so on. But that’s more of an upside for the future. It’s not currently something that we’re working on today. And the progress that we’re seeing across roofing in general has been really strong. We’re seeing a ton of traction both in terms of the sales side of things, but also our ability to get customers live. And so we remain as bullish as ever on the roofing side.
Josh Baer, Analyst, Morgan Stanley: Great. Thank you. And then maybe one for Dave, if I can as well too. Really appreciate kind of the color or commentary around the diversification of GTV. But maybe if you could kind of double-click on that as we think about kind of the health of the consumer, where you’re seeing momentum kind of on that side, and maybe a way to think about the dynamics you called out around kind of the break versus fix or break fix versus replace exposure or anything for us to be aware of on that front? Thank you.
Dave Sherry, CFO, ServiceTitan: Sure, Dylan. We look at a lot of internal data points. There are two main ones that we look at. The first is job growth, and the second is average ticket, and what we’ve seen in the last quarter has been pretty consistent on both, and so that for us gives us an indication that the economic market is fine, and that’s what we’re assuming in our guide going the next quarter.
D.J. Hynes, Analyst, Canaccord: Perfect. Thank you.
Conference Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Scott Berg with Needham & Company. Please proceed.
Terry Tillman, Analyst, Truist Securities: Hi, everyone. Really nice quarter here, and thanks for taking my questions. I guess I want to stick on the commercial side for both of them. The first question probably for Ara is on how you plan to maybe invest in the commercial opportunity as you start thinking about fiscal 2027. You seem pretty confident that you have all the functionality you need to really press into that area today, but do you do anything differently as you start thinking about how you tackle that opportunity next year?
Ara Mahdessian, Co-Founder and CEO, ServiceTitan: It’s not so much different. I think the thesis still remains the same that we need to nail construction, which is our current focus on the commercial side for the subcontractors. And that will not change as we go into next year. Where I suspect a lot of the value creation will shift to is less of these table stakes features and more AI-driven value creation, particularly on the CRM side. And so that’s where I suspect a lot of the R&D efforts will be going into as we think about going into becoming the market standard within the commercial space. But the traction that we’re seeing overall within the commercial market has been very strong. And the thesis around having a holistic solution that can cater to both the service side and the construction side of the subcontractors is proving out by how we hope to win.
D.J. Hynes, Analyst, Canaccord: Excellent. Helpful. And then as a follow-up, Dave, your comments on GTV started by saying outperformance in the commercial side, which I find maybe not unusual, but a little bit surprising because the usage of those solutions on the commercial side is certainly less than on the residential side. But was there anything unique to call out for the strength there on the commercial side in the quarter, or was it just kind of general usage, I guess?
Dave Sherry, CFO, ServiceTitan: So I’d say that what we saw in GTV was continued progression in commercial as a growth driver for us. But you hit on, I think, an important point there on what’s driving our usage take rate. And that, again, happens to be the higher adoption of our fintech products. We’ve seen more volume come on platform, which, of course, we monetize more. That’s more than offsetting the growth in commercial, which does, to your point, have a lower GTV usage take rate.
D.J. Hynes, Analyst, Canaccord: Excellent. Next quarter.
Conference Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Parker Lane with Stifel. Please proceed.
Ara Mahdessian, Co-Founder and CEO, ServiceTitan: Yeah. Hi, good afternoon. Thanks for taking the question. As you guys make a bigger push into the commercial space of the construction workflows and CRM, just wondering if you could comment on some of the learnings you’re finding in that area. What level of satisfaction are people having with the workflows or solutions they have in place there today? Is there more of a desire to consolidate on one platform that’s driving that opportunity for you? And lastly, when you look at the opportunity, is it fair to say that your existing residential customers are the ripest opportunity, or do you think there’s a handful of organizations you don’t have relationships with today already on residential that could be attractive targets for commercial?
Sure, so on the commercial side, some of the early observations that we’re seeing is that there is a similar force around consolidation within the space, and the degree to which private equity is increasing its presence there is playing out in a very similar way. What we’re seeing as being a primary difference is that the consolidators on the commercial and construction side are generally less, we’ll call it mature in terms of the centralization of certain functions and standardization across their acquisitions. And so they tend to be operated more as independent shops versus operating as a single company, which has been kind of more of the style of consolidation that we’ve seen on the residential side. Our assumption is that that’s not because there’s a lack of desire to do those things.
It’s just that the lack of capabilities from the systems perspective has been the primary driver there, not necessarily desire. And so we’re really leaning in on capabilities that allow commercial and construction contractors to have the benefit of synergies in a way that’s more similar to the residential side. And we think that’s going to be a tailwind for us as we progress into this market. When we look at the residential side, if you look at our recent partnership with Roto-Rooter, which was something we announced recently, a big part of what allowed us to win in that scenario was the fact that we had both the residential and commercial sides of the story that we can solve for them.
And so we expect that there’s going to be other large players similar to this where having both sides of the house be something that we can handle is something that’s going to be compelling. The James River example that we mentioned earlier today is another great example of that.
Appreciate the feedback. And Dave, one quick one for you. You talked about the diversification of different trades in GTV. As you get into some of these newer trades that are maybe less weather-dependent, is there any potential to see more of a smoothing of usage-based revenue quarter to quarter in the future?
Dave Sherry, CFO, ServiceTitan: Yeah. Great question. I think for now, we haven’t seen a real shift in seasonality. But to your point, not all trades have the same profile seasonality. And as those expand, we may see a shift. I wouldn’t say we’ve seen it yet, but it is a good observation that not all trades have the same seasonal trends than the ones we are large in today.
Ara Mahdessian, Co-Founder and CEO, ServiceTitan: Thank you.
Conference Operator: Thank you. Our next question is from Terry Tillman with Truist Securities. Please proceed.
Terry Tillman, Analyst, Truist Securities: Yeah. Hi, Ara, Vahe, and Jason. Congrats on the quarter. And I don’t know if it’s fortunate or unfortunate, but I’ll be doing lots of these earnings calls over the years still. The first question is I always like the testimonials from new customers or expanding customers. And I heard ecosystem multiple times and unrivaled ecosystem. So whether it’s the PE consolidators or your fintech partners or the OEMs, are you seeing some sort of kind of multiplier effect or benefits from just the ecosystem helping influence new business for you all or just expand faster in trades? And then I had a follow-up for Dave.
D.J. Hynes, Analyst, Canaccord: Yes, indeed, and welcome aboard. Looking forward to the partnership on the road ahead. We certainly do see the evangelism not just from the customer base, but also through the ecosystem and the partners. As you know, we are now very meaningful partners to manufacturers, distributors, other key vendors that serve contracting businesses, and in many cases, their solution also works better if a contractor has our solution, and so the value props benefit us, the contractor, and the third party, and so we do get a lot of referrals and references as a result of that, which helps with our go-to-market motion.
Terry Tillman, Analyst, Truist Securities: That’s great to hear. And I guess just to follow up for Dave, it sounds like one less day in the quarter for 4Q. It’s not typically your strongest free cash flow quarter by any means, but it’s also not your lowest. Anything to think about seasonality-wise for free cash flow in 4Q? Thank you.
Dave Sherry, CFO, ServiceTitan: Hey, Terry. Nothing big here. I’d say that typically over the year, our free cash flow and operating income come about the same. The big seasonal quarter on free cash flow ends up being Q1, where we pay out bonuses. There’s nothing in particular around Q4 that’s unique. I would just assume, and you think about your models, full year of free cash flow and full year operating income tend to converge pretty closely.
Terry Tillman, Analyst, Truist Securities: All right. Thanks.
Conference Operator: Thank you. Our next question is from the line of Andrew Sherman with TD Cowen. Please proceed.
Andrew Sherman, Analyst, TD Cowen: Oh, great. Thanks. Congrats, guys. Dave, on the residential HVAC, great to hear. It was consistent year over year. Could you talk about why your GTV there is generally insulated from the volume declines that the OEMs have seen worsen the past couple of quarters, and as their cycles start to improve, maybe next year, could that turn into a tailwind for you?
Dave Sherry, CFO, ServiceTitan: Sure. I think it’s important to remember, as I mentioned in my prepared remarks, that our GTV in residential is driven by break fix in existing homes. And our GTV includes components beyond system sales like labor, parts, and membership. There are other data points out there, like you said, the OEMs and other indices that may be impacted by certain variables that don’t generally drive our GTV, like new home construction and supplier inventory cycles. So as those go up and down, you may not see us fluctuate exactly with them. And lastly, I think it’s really important to remember that we have a diverse customer base across many trades and markets. It’s this diversity combined with the world-class operators that are our customers, combined with our software, which adds a lot of value to them, plus new customer additions.
It’s the foundation of the steady GTV growth you’ve seen over time. This quarter really wasn’t any different there. And that’s sort of the foundation from which we grow over time.
Andrew Sherman, Analyst, TD Cowen: That’s great. Thanks. And then on the pro products across your whole customer base, maybe if you could just rank order the ones seeing the highest demand.
Ara Mahdessian, Co-Founder and CEO, ServiceTitan: So I would say our most mature products are generally the ones that are the most penetrated. So Marketing Pro, for example, has been the one that has been in the market the longest and is the most mature. In terms of demand, what we’re seeing is, as Ara mentioned, AI is a huge focus area for our customers. It’s pretty strange, actually, to see how aggressive our customers are demanding solutions within the AI world. And so everything that touches, whether it’s virtual agents that are answering the calls or it’s AI on the demand generation side or on the automations around dispatch and back office, that’s probably the area that’s got the hottest demand right now.
Terry Tillman, Analyst, Truist Securities: Perfect. Thanks, guys.
Conference Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from Joe Vruwink with Baird. Please proceed.
Joe Vruwink, Analyst, Baird: Hi, great. Thanks for taking my questions. If I look at the subscription growth rate and how that’s been running faster than GTV growth, I know it’s not going to be perfect, but I do think about it as maybe highlighting the contribution of the pro products to subscription. Do you think that spread could maybe start to pick up in FY27, just given some of the things that came up at Pantheon? There’s a lot of new sales approaches to Pro, not just the Max program, but also the new product bundles, or, as you just mentioned, the willingness of customers to bring multiple products together if that can actually be automated and enhanced with an agent framework.
Dave Sherry, CFO, ServiceTitan: Yeah. I think, look, our platform earn rate is driven by a couple of factors. And what you’re thinking on is usage and subscription. I think Pro continues to be a major growth driver for us. We’ve also seen substantial growth in our customers’ businesses, which is driving usage. And the usage recently has been augmented by the adoption of our fintech products. So I’m not sure I’m ready to call for a change in the gap between the two growth rates. When we talk about next year, we’ll be really providing our perspective on FY27 in March. So I guess it’s probably too early for me to call on the change in the growth rates relative to one another.
Joe Vruwink, Analyst, Baird: Okay. That’s great, and then I know this residential topic has been asked quite a bit, but just a different, I guess, question from me. Dave, you mentioned that you looked internally at a lot of indicators, and you highlighted the ones that matter most. I mean, in your collective experience, which dates back a while now, and that covers several of these kind of HVAC destocking cycles, have there been times when you could have proactively flagged that maybe there was an issue with the consumer and you were braced for maybe compression and average ticket sizes? It sounds like those aren’t even popping up, but I wonder if maybe you’ve had a track record historically to call that out proactively.
Dave Sherry, CFO, ServiceTitan: I think during the COVID times, we saw average ticket grow quite quickly. And we realized that that was an influence of the consumer. And so I think that’s the time where we saw those two data points really diverge. The average ticket grew a lot shortly after COVID as the replacement cycle went kind of on steroids for a period of time.
Joe Vruwink, Analyst, Baird: Okay. Thank you.
Conference Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Daniel Jester with BMO Capital Markets. Please proceed.
Daniel Jester, Analyst, BMO Capital Markets: Yeah. Good afternoon, everybody. Thank you for taking my question. Maybe just one for me. I wanted to go back to the repair remarks and the comment about the marketing takeaway from a horizontal application. And maybe just kind of expand about sort of how and why you are such a better solution than a horizontal application in that use case. And as you think more generally, as your customers automate the back office, there’s lots of other sort of potential horizontal applications to go after. So as you think about prioritization of your R&D workflow, how interesting of an opportunity is that versus some of the other things that you’re working on? Thank you so much.
D.J. Hynes, Analyst, Canaccord: Great question. A lot of great solutions out there, but where I think Marketing Pro delivers very unique value props above anything else is it is very hard to manage all of your leads and CRM data in one platform and then export it into another platform and set up automated marketing campaigns and audiences and segments, and then try and synchronize when leads fall in and out of those audiences and constantly have to do that almost daily to make sure the right audience is targeted. That’s why Marketing Pro is designed to be specifically for the trades, and we have built automated campaigns into Marketing Pro so that it can detect when is the best time to launch certain types of campaigns and automatically do that on behalf of the contractor so that it doesn’t necessarily have to be done manually.
Daniel Jester, Analyst, BMO Capital Markets: Great. Thank you.
Conference Operator: Thank you so much. Our next question comes from the line of Yun Kim with Loop Capital. Please go ahead.
Daniel Jester, Analyst, BMO Capital Markets0: All right. Thank you. Vahe, it’s more of a strategic question, but obviously, we’re hearing a lot more about agentic commerce and general adoption of AI chatbots like ChatGPT in the consumer market. How does that change your current product strategy, especially around marketing and sales products? And does this potential rise of agentic commerce, does that represent an opportunity to increase your GTV takeaway? Thanks.
Ara Mahdessian, Co-Founder and CEO, ServiceTitan: So it’s still early days on that transition, and we’re obviously keeping a very close eye on how the consumer behavior is changing and how that would flow into us. We obviously have several products that would be affected by that in terms of things like reputation and our online booking integration with Google and so on. But we also think that it would present a meaningful opportunity for new products and new services to emerge. We’ve all kind of seen the OpenAI marketplace and how exciting that is for players to engage. And so we expect that consumer behavior will change, that the way in which they find contractors will evolve from what it is today. And we’re certainly very keen to capitalize on opportunities that will emerge as a function of that. But it’s still hard to say exactly how it’s going to shake out.
We’re just going to make sure that wherever it shakes out, we have the best product in the market for our customers.
Daniel Jester, Analyst, BMO Capital Markets0: Okay. Great. And then, Dave, real quick, anything to note around contract length and billing cycle as you continue to increase your commercial mix and also larger customer mix increases?
Dave Sherry, CFO, ServiceTitan: We build generally monthly in nearly all cases, even for large customers in commercial and residential. And I don’t see that changing. So no, I don’t think that that changes as we shift our focus towards more commercial or even larger customers.
Daniel Jester, Analyst, BMO Capital Markets0: Okay. Great. Thank you so much.
Conference Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from Tyler Radke with Citi. Please proceed.
Daniel Jester, Analyst, BMO Capital Markets5: Yeah. Thanks for taking the question. I wanted to follow up on the construction opportunity. Obviously, big market, you have a pretty good vision on full platform, doing everything from the workflows, payroll, etc. Where do you start? Where are you finding kind of the biggest low-hanging fruit? And just give us just a sense on how often you’re sort of replacing third-party solutions versus Greenfield. Thank you.
Ara Mahdessian, Co-Founder and CEO, ServiceTitan: We rarely see Greenfield. The vast majority of customers that we take on across the board, but especially in construction, are generally coming from something. The areas where we found the most success are contractors that are primarily focused on the service side of their business and looking to expand that part. That’s generally where we’re able to provide the most value to the subcontractors that approach their business from that perspective. As the construction module becomes more mature, we are starting to take on more and more subcontractors that focus more and more on the construction side. And today, I would say we’re at a point where we could take on pretty much any subcontractor in the mechanicals that’s got up to a per-project size of about $10 million-$15 million on a per-project basis.
The work we’re doing over the course of the next two quarters should push that up meaningfully into the 20-30 million per-project range. But as you’d imagine, for most subcontractors in the trades, that’s well north of the largest projects that they take on. And we’ve seen that the vast majority of prospects that we talk to fit within kind of that size range. And so for us, the work on the construction side now is going more towards the true value creation aspects of helping them grow, helping them increase their margins, helping them improve their on-time performance versus handling kind of the table stakes features, which is what most of the market does today.
Daniel Jester, Analyst, BMO Capital Markets0: Thank you. That’s helpful, and Dave, on the profitability side, certainly been tracking well ahead of plan this year. You’ve seen nice expansion on both operating and cash flow margins. I think you had some comments just around some of the hiring trends and everything, but any early look on how to think about margin expansion next year or anything else on FY27 would be great. Thank you.
Dave Sherry, CFO, ServiceTitan: Sure. I think we continue to be really intentional with you guys about guidance. We know we want to establish a track record with you all. And our plan is to provide a view of annual numbers in March of next year. What I’ll say is that you should expect from us to have the same framework we have this year, which is constraining our growth, excuse me, maximizing our growth, constrained by two variables: 24-month cap payback, 25% incremental margins. Now, this year, we were a bit behind on hiring, and that has led us to being a little over our incremental margin targets when you combine that with the strength we’ve seen in usage. I would expect next year for us to again target the 25% incrementals, but expect less upside than we’ve seen this year as we catch up on hiring towards the end of this fiscal.
Daniel Jester, Analyst, BMO Capital Markets0: Very clear. Thank you.
Conference Operator: Thank you. Our next question is from the line of Jason Celino with KeyBanc Capital Markets. Please proceed.
Daniel Jester, Analyst, BMO Capital Markets5: Hey, great. Thanks for fitting me in. I wanted to ask about usage. We’ve seen two quarters in a row of acceleration, and I think, Dave, you mentioned it’s been partly driven by better fintech utilization. Can you just explain that a little bit?
Dave Sherry, CFO, ServiceTitan: Sure. We have financing and payment products for our customers. They’re not adopted by 100% of our customers. And what we’ve seen in the last couple of quarters is that we have an increasing adoption of those solutions as our customers realize the benefits of the fully integrated solution. Our team internally has gone and spoken to customers that are not integrated and gotten them to use the solution. And that’s driven up the usage takeover overall.
Daniel Jester, Analyst, BMO Capital Markets5: Okay. Excellent. And then on the subscription side, any updates on kind of the momentum you’re seeing with Pro product attach, especially after launching Field Pro at Pantheon? Thanks.
Dave Sherry, CFO, ServiceTitan: We continue to see strength in our Pro product attach. I think that is one of the main and most important growth drivers for us. I think that what you’re seeing, if you look at our overall platform earn rate, is a tale of sort of three things. The first is when GTV grows the way it did in the quarter, platform, excuse me, subscription revenue doesn’t grow directly with it, which is a headwind to earn rate. The second is we’re seeing a lot of growth in markets where we’re not the market standard. As you can imagine, our earn rate is lower in markets where we’re not the market standard. Those two headwinds are being more than compensated by the growth we’re seeing in Pro products.
That’s sort of because ProProducts remain a growth driver for us, which is why you see our overall earn rate expand year over year on the same comparable period.
Conference Operator: Thank you so much. One moment for our next question that comes from the line of Hannah Rudoff with Piper Sandler. Please proceed.
Daniel Jester, Analyst, BMO Capital Markets3: Hi guys. Thanks for taking my question. Great to hear about the early progress on the MAX program you’ve seen and the strong Pro product adoption this quarter. Given where you sit now, do you feel like pricing and packaging of Pro product is in a good place, or do you feel like you still have a lot of room to optimize the pricing and packaging of Pro?
Dave Sherry, CFO, ServiceTitan: We’ve talked pretty openly that we’ve not optimized our pricing. I think Max is the beginning of the future. We think we have a better solution there. It’s still in the pilot phase, and we’re still trying to figure it out. We’re focused primarily today on making sure that our customers, as Vahe said, are wildly successful, and as part of that, we will evolve and ensure the packaging and pricing work perfectly. For now, it’s in a pilot, and we’re excited about what it means for us going forward.
Daniel Jester, Analyst, BMO Capital Markets3: Makes sense. And then with the end-to-end platform for commercial now fully available with commercial CRM and construction management, how are you thinking about timeline to get to market standard and what it’s going to take to do that?
Daniel Jester, Analyst, BMO Capital Markets0: Yeah. Great question. It’s hard to say exactly. I would say that for becoming market standard, there’s both a product component and having the ability to perform certain capabilities. And then there’s a market aspect in terms of branding, recognition, and just the overall, let’s say, credibility that we have. And I would say we’re pretty close from a product perspective. There’s a few more things that maybe over the next couple of quarters will need to come online to really firmly make that case. But I would say we have work to do on the branding side and making sure that from a reputational standpoint, it’s as strong in commercial as it is on residential.
And so I would expect that it’ll be at least another year before we’ve got the market side of the thing, market side of the equation kicking in the same way that we do on the residential side.
Daniel Jester, Analyst, BMO Capital Markets3: Great. Thank you so much.
Conference Operator: Thank you so much. And our last question comes from the line of Michael Turrin with Wells Fargo Securities. Please proceed.
Daniel Jester, Analyst, BMO Capital Markets5: Hey, great. Thanks. Appreciate you fitting me on. And I’ll ask a question that maybe helps summarize just some of the questions throughout. So you can probably tell we’ve all been fielding macro questions around just some of the end-market commentary. It doesn’t seem like there’s great signal there given the results you just put up. So maybe just across the team from your perspective, what are the signals investors should be watching, whether it’s customer segments you’re expanding into, some of the product add-ons, or some of the financial metrics that could maybe provide better signal? Just give you a chance to focus some of the conversation around where investors should be looking as they learn more of the ServiceTitan story from here. Thanks very much.
Dave Sherry, CFO, ServiceTitan: Hey, Michael. I’ll take this one. I’m excited to see you next week. I think for us, a couple of things are worth noting here. First, as you know, we’re trying to run this as a marathon, not a sprint. We’re really excited by the opportunity to durably compound here. And the way we do that is a pretty simple growth formula. We ensure we deliver enormous value to our customers. And as they grow, we grow. The way we look at that is two things. One is expansion in GTV, which I’ve talked a fair bit about today, is a result of a diverse set of trades, particularly led right now by commercial. And the second is our ability to earn a portion of that GTV as revenue for us. And that is principally right now driven by the Pro products, which you’ve heard us talk a lot about.
I think watching our evolution in GTV and earn rate against it is probably the best way to watch our performance here.
Daniel Jester, Analyst, BMO Capital Markets2: Thanks very much.
Conference Operator: Thank you. And this will conclude the Q&A session for today. I will pass the call back to Ara Mahdessian for his final remarks.
Ara Mahdessian, Co-Founder and CEO, ServiceTitan: I just want to thank everyone for joining us today. We know you have the opportunity to spend time with great companies. And so we greatly appreciate you choosing to spend your time with us. And we cannot wait to celebrate the second annual Day of the Trades on December 12th with many of you in New York. Thank you and wishing you all the best.
Conference Operator: With that, we conclude our conference. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.
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