Earnings Labs

Braze, Inc. (BRZE)

Q3 2026 Earnings Call· Tue, Dec 9, 2025

$22.48

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Transcript

Operator

Operator

Welcome to the Braze's Fiscal Third Quarter 2026 Earnings Conference Call. My name is Leila, and I'll be your operator for today's call. [Operator Instructions] . I'll now turn the call over to Christopher Ferris, Vice President of Braze Investor Relations.

Christopher Ferris

Analyst

Thank you, operator. Good afternoon, and thank you for joining us today to review Brazer's results for the fiscal third quarter 2026. I'm joined by our Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer, Bill Magnuson, and our Chief Financial Officer, Isabelle Winkles. We announced our results in a press release issued after the market closed today. Please refer to the Investor Relations section of our website at investors.brave.com for more information and a supplemental presentation related to today's earnings announcement. During this call, we will make statements related to our business that are forward-looking under federal securities laws and the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These statements include, but are not limited to, statements regarding our financial outlook for the fourth quarter and the fiscal year ended January 31, 2026. The anticipated benefits from and product advancements due to the combination of Braze and ongoing developments in Braze AI technology, our expectations concerning new customer verticals our anticipated customer behaviors, including vendor consolidation and replacement trends and their impact on Brace, our potential market opportunity and our ability to effectively execute on such opportunity, and our long-term financial targets and goals, including our expectations regarding our profitability framework. These statements are subject to a variety of risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from our expectations and reflect our views only as of today. We assume no obligation to update any such forward-looking statements. For a discussion of the material risks and uncertainties that could affect our actual results, please refer to the risks identified in today's press release and our SEC filings, both available on the Investor Relations section of our website. I'd also like to remind you that today's call will include certain non-GAAP financial measures used by management to evaluate our ongoing operations and to aid investors in further understanding the company's fiscal third quarter 2020 performance in addition to the impact these items have on the financial results. Please refer to the reconciliations of our non-GAAP financial measures to the most directly comparable financial measures calculated in accordance with U.S. GAAP included in our earnings release under the Investor Relations section of our website. The non-GAAP financial measures should not be considered as a substitute for or superior to the measures of financial performance prepared in accordance with U.S. GAAP. And now I'd like to turn the call over to Bill.

William Magnuson

Analyst

Thank you, Chris, and good afternoon, everyone. We're pleased to report strong third quarter results, generating $191 million of revenue, up 25.5% year-over-year and 6% from the prior quarter. We also continue to drive efficiency in our business, improving non-GAAP operating margins by over 400 basis points year-over-year and generating $18 million of free cash flow. We have now delivered 4 straight quarters of non-GAAP operating income and 6 straight quarters of non-GAAP net income, demonstrating our commitment to driving higher profitability while thoughtfully reinvesting in our business with the goal to position Braze as the global standard for omnichannel customer engagement. Our momentum was strong in the quarter as we again realized solid bookings across verticals and geographies. Pipeline generation was solid, indicating continued market demand, while customers continue to adopt more channels and AI solutions, driving optimism as we look ahead to fiscal year 2027. We achieved our strongest quarter of customer additions in 3 years, adding 106 sequentially and 317 year-over-year to 2,528 up 14%. Our large customer additions were also very strong, adding 2,500,000 plus ARR customers sequentially and 69% year-over-year to 303, up 29%. Recent new business wins and existing customer expansions include CJ AlvYoung, Eventbrite, Goat, Grubhub Seamless Linkt, Mindbody, nuts.com, Rafiq, RSG Group, GMBH and Vivid seats, along with many others. Competitive takeaways from the legacy Marketing Clouds continue to demonstrate the market's preference for Braze's AI-driven omni-channel customer engagement solution, leveraging first-party data and frontier AI to deliver on modern customer engagement use cases. This quarter, brands across diverse industries and geographies migrated to Braze's from legacy platforms, including a global appliance manufacturer, North American financial services firm, a Latin American retailer, a North American consumer insights platform, a sports league in APAC, a North American restaurant chain and a luxury goods…

Isabelle Winkles

Analyst

Thank you, Bill, and thank you, everyone, for joining us today. As Bill stated, we reported a strong third quarter with revenue increasing 25.5% year-over-year to $191 million driven by a combination of existing customer contract expansions, renewals and new business. Braze AI decisioning studio, formerly known as Offerfit, contributed $4.8 million of revenue in the quarter. This implies an organic revenue growth rate of 22.3% year-over-year, which represents the second sequential quarter of organic revenue growth acceleration. Subscription revenue remains the primary component of our total top line, contributing 95% of our third quarter revenue, while the remaining 5% represents a combination of recurring professional services and onetime configuration and onboarding fees. Total customer count increased 14% year-over-year to 2,528 customers as of October 31, 2025, up 317 from the same period last year and up 106 from the prior quarter. This sequential growth reflects the largest quarter-over-quarter increase in customer count since the third quarter of fiscal year 2023. Our total number of large customers, which we define as those spending at least $500,000 annually grew 29% year-over-year to [ $303 ] and as of October 31, 2025, these customers contributed 63% to our total ARR compared to a 61% contribution as of the same quarter last year. Measured across all customers, dollar-based net retention was 108% and while dollar-based net retention for our large customers was 110%. Expansion was again broadly distributed across industries and geographic regions. Revenue outside the U.S. contributed 45% of our total revenue in the third quarter in line with the second quarter of this year and the prior year quarter. In quarter, organic dollar-based net retention increased for the second straight quarter to over 107% and slightly above our in-quarter organic dollar-based net retention in Q2 of this year. We continue to…

Operator

Operator

[Operator Instructions]. Your first question will come from Ryan MacWilliams with Wells Fargo.

Ryan MacWilliams

Analyst

Bill, glad to hear about the brave health care customer who use Braze agent console to build an AI agent to chat with our customers. It's almost customer service use case from Braze interesting we'll love to hear your view on what are some of the reasons raised Avis might be an easier starting point for organizations when building new AI use cases.

William Magnuson

Analyst

I think it's a great question and a great example to ask it about because that use case was integrated directly into Canvas. And what I didn't share in the prepared remarks is actually that the first prototype version of it was made by that customer while they were at the gate, waiting for their flight to leave from Forge. The agility that you get out of being able to deploy an already like purpose-built agent framework into an engine like Canvas that allows you to leverage all of the interaction support that's already there, the massive amount of first-party data that's at your fingertips, already in that environment. I mentioned Cannabis context, which is a feature that we launched earlier this year in anticipation of continuing to have these units of intelligence, get integrated into more parts of a canvas in order to provide the right logic or more enhanced personalization, things where conditional logic able to become reasoning and therefore, able to respond to the unstructured data or all of the unpredictability of humans as they're interacting in these complex flows. And this is a use case where I think a lot like we've spoken about in the past, this would have become a customer support interaction, but actually because the product is able to intuit what the customer wants through or interpret what the customer wants, through the agent that has been configured to kind of understand that business problem and fed with the right context and first-party data, which, of course, we make extremely easy because of how the agent consoles plug into both Braze catalogs and Braze canvas, you're able to deploy these, deploy them and test them against business as usual. This was a great example where they already had a solution up and running. They incorporate new intelligence into an alternative solution, you run that in a head-to-head, Canvas, of course, already has that -- the automation for the as well as all the built-in reporting to track those conversions to be able to know exactly what uplift you're getting -- and then that, of course, drives the conviction to be able to promote these firm experiments into production. And it's great to see all of that already happening from -- on a rapid time line since the launch of agent console at Forge.

Ryan MacWilliams

Analyst

And then for Isabelle, it seems like a number of your key metrics improved in the quarter, and your 4Q guide seems stronger than historical. I love if you could break down some of the components of the drivers of these improving trends.

Isabelle Winkles

Analyst

Yes. So a lot of these things have been in progress for some time as we think about ongoing productivity enhancements that have occurred within the sales organization, and we've been seeing that over the last several quarters. And then the efforts that we've had to mitigate downsell and dollar term, and that's been really exciting to see that come to fruition. And these things have combined together to enable us to retain more dollars and then go out and continue to sell more effectively and efficiently. So we're really excited about the momentum that we're seeing in the business, and that's playing into our ability to overachieve the numbers that we have guided for, for Q3 and then provide the guide that we did for Q4.

Operator

Operator

Your next question will come from [ Raimo Lenschow ] with Barclays.

Unknown Analyst

Analyst

Bill, you talked earlier about the the growing momentum, especially on the legacy side. Is there anything in the market specifically that you would attribute that to? So is it like AI adoption and you need a more modern platform -- is it kind of the getting end of life, like from a technical perspective and hence, more stuff is happening? Or what's driving that momentum there?

William Magnuson

Analyst

Yes. I would say as we look forward, one of the things that you latched on to is that I do think this is a moment in history in our category where in the start-up landscape, we're seeing consolidation and capitulation happening with more subscale or point solution or regional players. The enterprise competitive set is distracted and stagnating in many ways and I think we see that the broader ecosystem sees it. And that means that just the awareness of Braze, the differentiation the desire and optimism around investing in a Braze practice, investing in Braze's technology, I think increasingly stands alone amongst that competitive landscape because we combine both the scale of being a public company operating at the level of R&D investment that we are, along with the agility that we're demonstrating through being on the leading edge of new AI innovation and our recently launched ChatGPT native app SDK is another great testament to that, which not only was first SDK out of the gate on that, just 2 weeks after they announced it. But here we are many weeks later and it's still the only one. And so I think when you broadly look across the customer engagement landscape, Braze continues to stand out for our committed investment, our leadership in the space. And we've spoken about a lot of the things in the demand environment that have caused that enterprise replacement cycle to be slow over the last couple of years. Basically, that switching costs are still costs, and it's been hard for a lot of brands to kind of extend their planning horizon out while they've been focused so much on profitability over growth and a lot of the other things that a lot of people are seeing in the broader demand environment, but we're really optimistic about where we're at from a competitive positioning standpoint. I think our customers are seeing that as well. More and more of the conversations that we have that are driving that enterprise replacement cycle are a question of when they're no longer if. And it's still transition for enterprise brands to make, but it's one that I think we're very prepared to continue to invest to accelerate that share gain, and we're excited about what that means for our long-term positioning in the market.

Unknown Analyst

Analyst

Okay. Perfect. And then one for Isabelle the NRR, like we know it's lagging, so it came in the same level as we saw in Q2. Can you kind of speak to kind of -- like how do you think about -- and actually, I remember last quarter, you talked about like intra-quarter was getting better. Whatever the puts and takes there this quarter, I think?

Isabelle Winkles

Analyst

Yes, absolutely. So in my prepared remarks, I actually continued at the same disclosure that we provided last quarter. And so we are providing the in-quarter organic dollar-based net retention and indicated that, that continues to go up. So we talked about in Q1, it was a little bit below 107%. Q2 was a little bit above 10%. And it continues on that trajectory still in the 107% range, but a little bit above the Q2 number. So we're really excited to see the stabilization in that metric over the last 3 quarters.

Operator

Operator

Your next question will come from Gabriela Borges with Goldman Sachs.

Gabriela Borges

Analyst

For Bill and Isabel. So you gave us the 2 points of contribution from the decision in Studio. I'd like to get your thoughts broadly on how you think AI can impact the growth algorithm of your business.

Isabelle Winkles

Analyst

So when we think about the monetization of AI, and we've talked about this a little bit over the last couple of quarters as AI has just been introduced more generally from a monetization standpoint. We think about it in 2 buckets. So leaving aside decisioning studio, which obviously we're directly monetizing on a use case basis today. And then there's sort of 2 other flavors of AI that live in the tool. One is AI that is generally helping our users, our customers with the overall workflow and things that you invoke kind of once and then allow for kind of a broad scale deployment of a particular canvas or campaign or content that doesn't really weigh on our own cost structure in the same way as things that invoke AI sort of on a repeated basis that are on a one at a time in real time, always on function. And so the things that are just kind of invoked occasionally for kind of large-scale and deployment sort of occasionally, that we would sort of include in the platform and largely not charge for those on an indication basis. The things that are kind of operating one at a time in real time, we anticipate putting those into the credit framework and they're charging customers as they invoke the LLM usage, which, therefore, is going to have some impact on our cost structure over time. And so that's how we plan to incorporate that. We are not there yet. And so that is potential upside as we include that in the credit portfolio.

Gabriela Borges

Analyst

That makes sense. The follow-up is for Bill. So with respect to competition, I'm curious if you see your customers building bespoke agent tech stacks. I'm not talking about live coding, but something more sophisticated that sits next to you or adjacent to braze such that you think, well, really that functionality should be built in Braze over time. I'm curious if you're seeing that as a dynamic in your customer base and B, if you are, what can you do to move some of those projects on to brazen a packaged soft kind of discussion as opposed to having customers build [indiscernible].

William Magnuson

Analyst

Yes. So high level, the composability in the design of Brave has led our customers to build and develop systems that enrich either data inputs to braze provide maybe more bespoke orchestration signals do deeper content personalization, et cetera, and building those alongside and then integrating them with Braze, we specifically designed all of our API layers to be able to have flexibility with respect to different layers of abstraction, different separation responsibilities designs, which are great for engineering teams that are trying to maintain control or where they have ownership or responsibility for certain signals that are important in the flow of timing or orchestration or personalization or what have you. But so want to give marketers the experimentation and agility that only the Braze platform can really provide through the dashboard. And by bringing those things together, we actually see that some of our most sophisticated customers to play side by side. Now the other thing that's happened alongside that is obviously that the Braze platform continues to build more powerful and generalized solutions to a lot of these problems. And I think item recommendations is a great example of this, where if you go back to Braze 7 years ago. We had robust integrations with either personalization platforms like AWS personalized or we would do direct calls to web services that our customers would set up in order to provide recommendations. As the state-of-the-art and recommendation systems, kept getting better and better, we were able to provide an offering that was both generally powerful so that we could sell it across our diverse customer base, but also would consistently win head-to-heads with the bespoke in-house systems that were built by those engineering teams and of course, have the added benefit of not needing to manage those systems…

Operator

Operator

Your next question will come from Derrick Wood with TD Cowen.

James Wood

Analyst

Great. I guess first question for Bill. Could you drill a bit more on this new integration with Chat GPT and kind of pushing the first-party data into more personalization within Chat apps. I guess how much customer interest is there and driving more engagement there versus traditional channels? And what does this mean for your monetization and value delivery positioning?

William Magnuson

Analyst

Yes. So I'll actually start with the end of that question because the implications and what it means does depend a lot on how these app ecosystems evolve from here. And we really are just in the earliest days of it. And so when you look at the in-chat native app or Agentic experiences and how they'll continue to push forward, I think the future role that Braze plays and also the strategies that brands will deploy, depends a lot on how close or open these platforms end up being with respect to things like identity, authentication, payment or allowing differentiated native UX, you're even already seeing some of the implications of these decisions in who's investing in these early experiences where within the Chatpat ecosystem as an example, Amazon has largely opted out Walmart has opted in, but Walmart is also they're focused on use cases outside of basic staples because they're looking at that as a discovery channel allowing for them to get net new customers, which, of course, is an awesome strategic lever for them when they look at the chatty user base and the different use cases that are being deployed there. But the -- when you look at the evolution of that over time, the important questions are basically going to be like how much of a fortress is the walled garden that the likes of ChatGPT or Gemini or others are going to make? And how are they going to monetize and like how are they basically going to take the user attention that they have within that walled garden and turn that into revenue for their business. Now if they stay open, which is more similar to the web and which the early signs on ChatGPT native apps are pointing to then the…

James Wood

Analyst

Awesome. Very helpful perspective. Maybe one Isabelle for you. Just the inflection in new customer generation very impressive that followed a strong Q2. Can you just drill into what's helping drive that velocity of new deals? Is it offer fit given in the decisioning product given you new front doors into different accounts? Or are there other factors in play? Anything to highlight here?

Isabelle Winkles

Analyst

Yes. No, not specifically related to OfferFit. Remember, the cycles there are going to be a little longer. But generally, around kind of Braves core, the legacy replacement cycle continues to be in our favor. Our competitive position continues to be the regional investments that we have made and the efforts around verticalization continue to deliver results. So that's all really, really great to see, and then I talked about the mitigation strategies that we've put in place to avoid both downsell and customer churn. And so when you mitigate levels of customer churn, you retain more customers, and you're seeing that in -- as well in the net new customer adds, ad number. So we're really excited about the overall momentum of the business.

Operator

Operator

[Operator Instructions]. Our next question will come from Taylor McGinnis with UBS. We'll return to Taylor. We will move on to next -- we'll take a question from -- Taylor...

Taylor McGinnis

Analyst

Okay. Perfect. Bill, the Portside was so much better. So just trying to understand in terms of what's driving that, -- so is that just a function of some of the past headwinds starting to ease or 3Q being stronger at the end? Or are you actually seeing a further improvement of demand trends into the first half of 4Q? And then just curious, any reads for you have on 2026 as you've been talking to your customers about their spending plans?

Isabelle Winkles

Analyst

Taylor, I'll take that. So on the revenue guide, we do continue to approach this with a risk-adjusted position. And so what you're seeing is some of what I talked about in the last question that was asked, where we're seeing continued strength across the legacy replacement cycle and then just to strengthen our overall competitive position. and just some of the investments that we've been making in retention, which obviously is immediately beneficial to revenue as well as efforts around our regional focus and footprint and efforts around verticalization. All of this is kind of driving the net benefits in the business. And you're seeing it in strength in metrics such as RPO and CRPO. And so there's kind of strength across the metrics here. You're seeing stabilization in the dollar-based net retention, you're seeing strength in the customer -- net customer adds. And all of that kind of feeds together to enable us to not only overachieve what we had guided for in Q3, but also to raise the expectations here for Q4.

Operator

Operator

Our next question will come from Arjun Bhatia with William Blair.

Arjun Bhatia

Analyst

Perfect One question on AI decision Studio. Bill, I'm just curious, just in the kind of early reception that you've had from customers? How are they finding the product? What are the kind of use cases you're seeing early traction on? And I assume as we go into fiscal '27, this is going to become a bigger and bigger part of the story. What does the pipeline look like now that you've had some time to integrate it and get it in the hands of customers? And just how should we think about growth here and what can unlock next year?

William Magnuson

Analyst

Yes. So first of all, the integration both on the R&D and the organizational side continues a pace. And a huge thank you to all the incoming OfferFit employees who have already made Braze their new professional home over the last few months. We're seeing tremendous impact from the teams coming together and the integration process, we're looking forward to formally being on the other side of that and do a combined business as usual next year. Commercially, pipeline generation has remained strong, and we've seen a growing number of exciting customer wins, including the case study that I mentioned in my prepared remarks. And we're seeing those wins across verticals and in geos around the world, which has been fantastic to see. The cross-sell thesis, I think, is continuing to bear fruit as even Braze's most sophisticated customers are searching for ways to achieve rand I think decisioning has then also rapidly become a critical part of the overall as AI road map which, of course, is in every single customer conversation. And so while the full deployment of decisioning Studio Pro is -- it's definitely more of an enterprise deal cycle. And it's a new category that requires customer education. And so it's not being included into every deal conversation to deeply qualify and explore the deployment of decisioning studio use cases, but even for those customers that are only evaluating it, it's really fantastic for them to see that there is a progression that they'll be able to move through as they adopt the greatest of the existing Braze customer engagement platform and then know that they can circle back around to those most important points in the customer journey to get maximum performance out of it. And then, of course, through the Braze customers who are…

Arjun Bhatia

Analyst

Very helpful. And congrats on the momentum here.

Operator

Operator

Our next question will come from Brian Peterson with Raymond James.

Brian Peterson

Analyst

So Bill, you had mentioned some verticals that you had some strong wins with. I'm curious, as you think about the pipeline of opportunities -- has that changed at all relative to your current mix? And are there any end markets maybe where you're particularly excited about as we're heading into calendar year '26?

William Magnuson

Analyst

Yes. I think with a broad brush, I don't think we've seen any sort of large rotations in terms of the vertical split of opportunities. But there is an important dynamic that happens as we penetrate deeper into certain verticals, especially those that are more capital-intensive or highly regulated, which, of course, are industry properties that are correlated with a little bit more risk aversion or slower decision-making. And in those -- we often work with first disruptors and then we work with those under threat of disruption and it takes those proof points with the early startups like for instance, with HealthTech or fintech before you can move more meaningfully into the traditional hospital systems and traditional health insurers are moving into the larger banks and insurance companies and credit unions and such around the world. And so I think when you look at some of those categories that we've been investing in, where we've got a great track record with the start-ups, and we're now parlaying that into more -- a deeper penetration into the more traditional enterprise in those spaces. That's probably where I would identify the biggest vertical by vertical shift, but that's not necessarily an exogenous property of those verticals themselves but really more about Braze's journey to penetrate them over time.

Operator

Operator

Your next question will come from Scott Berg with Needham.

Scott Berg

Analyst

Great quarter. So many of them I just got a select 1 -- let's talk about your 500,000-plus customers. It's the second quarter in a row where you additions really kind of jumped off the page, especially from a historical level. Are you seeing, I don't know, a change in how you're landing with some of these customers? Is this maybe driven more by better kind of expansion activity with them maybe help paint some color in terms of what's going on with those larger customers.

Isabelle Winkles

Analyst

Yes. So nothing changing and sort of certainly the incentive structure for the business. So definitely just our sales team incentivized to kind of land and then we'll go and expand from there. And so we are excited to see that there's continued strong momentum in the upsell from those who were previously at under $500,000 to those upselling to be north of $500,000. And that's obviously healthily outpacing those that are either down selling or churning. So it's just great to see that momentum. There's obviously more for us to be selling. The decisioning studio is now in the mix. The with customers who are buying maybe a little bit closer to the pin to start with on their original entitlements, there's more opportunity for them to kind of expand over time as cross channel becomes more and more important. I think you heard Bill's prepared remarks with regards to what we were seeing, certainly around Black Friday and Cyber Monday, just the volume of messages that are sent across the diverse set of channel continues to increase. And so that is going to result in upsells from our customer base. And so we are really excited to see kind of that momentum across the whole customer base, but then also obviously focused across the 500-plus sellers of buyers. So it's great to see that.

Operator

Operator

Your next question will come from Brent Huff with Stephens.

Brett Huff

Analyst

I want to drill in a little bit on the momentum that we've seen in the past couple of quarters. both in the metrics and kind of the tone, Bill, I can't remember as a few quarters ago that you mentioned that folks in sort of the more progressive marketing organizations we're a little bit tapping the brakes. They were a little bit more hesitant to buy more aggressively to think about growth and maybe a little bit of retrenchment. I'm wondering I know it's a little bit of an anecdotal question, but do you get the sense that that's changed? And I guess maybe to put a finer point on it, have we started selling to folks that are willing to sort of buy side by side with the legacy platforms in anticipation of switching? I don't know if that's the right sort of flag to look at.

William Magnuson

Analyst

Yes. I think that the dynamic of switching costs being costs, and they're not being excess budget to really finance that is still there. As we've talked about in the past, a lot of that is about just making sure that we're doing a great job of qualifying and timing opportunities and a lot of times, that's also consultative. A lot of these customers who last switched their platform 6, 7 years ago when they first deployed of the legacy Marketing Cloud. It might have even taken them like 2 years. And so in their own head when they first start the conversation, they might also be under the impression that the switching costs are a lot higher than they need to be with a careful plan. And so there's a lot of ways that we address that. But I think that the dynamic is still at play. And one thing I would point to, though, is -- and you saw this in the Black Friday, Cyber Monday stats, that the growth of SMS and WhatsApp year-over-year was over 90%. And what you see there is a willingness to invest in premium channels. Those are usually mid-funnel use cases, places where people are working -- where they've already had some amount of engagement and they're working to get to the conversion point. And you don't see spending on those higher marginal cost channels unless those are working and people are investing for the ROI being able to drive higher conversion rates in those. And so I think it's a good sign. We're also -- we're seeing the resumption of these credits upsells that we've hypothesized in the past where a lot of the buying was very close to the pin for customers where they would project what they were going to use over the next 12 months. And -- sometimes they weren't even buying that. They were just buying enough to get to the next calendar year, or they were buying very tightly with those capacity projections. And what we're starting to see now is customers running out of those credits early and making upsells and increasing the run rate of their consumption to match like what they're actually doing. And so I think a more normal buying pattern, and we're seeing a resumption of that, which is a good sign. And so I think we're seeing a few things here and there of what I would call more normalization. And we're going to continue to build for the opportunity as it's ahead of us.

Operator

Operator

Your next question will come from Matthew VanVliet with Cantor Fitzgerald.

Matthew VanVliet

Analyst

I guess looking at the AI decisioning studio, Bill, you mentioned that it's still sort of an enterprise sale, and we saw that from the offer fit sort of average deal size. But as you look at the product road map ahead, are you thinking of using some of the other products you've built kind of in that area to move into the mid-market and sort of lower enterprise? Or will there be strategy for the decisioning engine to have kind of a lighter weight, lower cost version to attack that market over the next several quarters.

William Magnuson

Analyst

Yes. So I'd take a step back and look at the broader problem space as AI-driven relevance optimization and so decisioning is a specific part of that. It's a data science machine learning-driven approach. But there's also people that are already using, for instance, the agent console to be able to take in small amounts of the first-party data that's flowing through the canvas with the user and be able to do personalization with it. And I was wondering if there would be an opportunity on this earnings call to share with everyone that we registered vivedecisioning.com last month. And if you visit that, it will afford you directly to the Braze agent console website because we do absolutely think that there's going to be a lot of different starting points for people as they start to deploy AI into what previously were more deterministic or static workflows. A big part of Braze pass was getting people to move from batch and blast to more deterministic personalization. And now the next generation of that is going to be moving from determine a sick personalization into 101 decisioning and into more agentic approaches that are doing individualized personalization. And we were just chatting earlier this week about how the modern equivalent of high first name is actually going to be able to be using the agent console because if you go back to that example from the question that we started with about the agent console in an experiment where the marketer actually built the original agent while waiting at the gate for their flight -- that's a great example of rapid deployment, early experimentation. It achieved some amount of uplift, and that inspires the next generation of building on top of that. And so it's not just about being able to deploy quickly, but also making sure that there's an on-ramp into these more advanced techniques over time. And I think that there's a lot of great uplift to be had for marketers all across the spectrum. Just like 10 years ago, there was a lot of great uplift to be had merely from doing high for it.

Operator

Operator

Our next question will come from Tyler Radke with Citi.

Tyler Radke

Analyst

Sort of big picture question. Just given the strength you're seeing in the results and acceleration and growth here, do you feel like you are starting to get exposure or access to some of the more dedicated AI budgets as opposed to just being beholden to the Martech budgets, which have continued to be under pressure and how are you thinking about getting further exposure to that as you think about your go-to-market strategy going forward?

William Magnuson

Analyst

Yes. I think the key thing with decisioning is not necessarily accessing AI budgets, but the fact that we're selling performance, we are able to show demonstrable uplift with rigorous rigorous reporting against it in some of the most important use cases that people have in their customer journeys where they understand the value of those transition points and we're able to show that head-to-head or in the example that I provided with the agent console example that I referenced in the prepared remarks, those were 2 important parts in the customer journey where there had already been rigorous testing and the decisioning approach at or the deployment of the agents brought additional uplift into those flows and that generates real money for those customers. And so I think better than accessing experimental AI budgets, we are selling performance. And I think that, that is a really great place to be because by bringing together the composable data and composable intelligence with Braze's comprehensive cross-channel support that really no 1 else can match. -- we've got a -- and we can, by the way, do that at any scale. We can do it in a secure way with a strong total cost of ownership story and be able to deploy with category leaders across every major vertical in the world's top brands all around the world. And so combining together that track record with the leading-edge innovation and then being able to sell demonstrable performance is the right path to unlocking incremental budgets.

Operator

Operator

Your next question will come from Yun Kim with Loop Capital.

Yun Suk Kim

Analyst

Okay. Great. A lot of news about Agentic Commerce. And obviously, we already have a few questions on it. But what is your thought on expanding your product portfolio beyond first-party data-driven products that you have today, maybe perhaps addressing some of the customer acquisition aspect of marketing and advertising that may leverage some third-party data. We are not getting it is that -- the way that Agentic such that is more or less by passing the customer sign up because the personalization data is actually residing with chatbot vendors. So just wondering how you're thinking about the purchasation data may shift from the retailers to the actual Chatbot vendors? How you're thinking about your product portfolio in terms of sticking with the first-party data? Or are you open to kind of expanding beyond that?

William Magnuson

Analyst

Yes. So first of all, Braze already does have an important role that we play where -- with respect to acquisition and with the special case of acquisition, which are like reactivation of known customers that have just drifted away from the brand. And those are places where people already use Canvas to help coordinate their acquisition strategies. They're also using the automation that we have through Braze data platform and through Canvas in order to drive first-party data into various acquisition use cases. And we've got -- we have important identity resolution partnerships out in the data space as well as with -- as well as with service providers that bring together these third-party data sets along with identity resolution capability and combine that with the composability of the Braze data platform to drive these strategies forward. And so you already have customers that are deploying these types of strategies within Braze. I think in the example that you provided where the agent disintermediates the brand entirely and you just kind of -- you ask it to go transact on your behalf and decision make on your behalf. I've spoken about that at Forge before in a customer conferences. And I think that there's a class of purchasing where we really do think about these things as utilities or commodities in our lives. And we are going to want to not only outsource that to the agent to kind of do those transactions in the first place, but then also not want to have any ongoing relationship with the brand, right? But for the things that we actually care about and are attached to where we build customer loyalty, and we really drive value for those brands over time. I think that even if the initial purchases or even…

Operator

Operator

Our final question will come from Patrick Walravens with Citizens.

Patrick Walravens

Analyst

Let me add my congratulations. So Bill, it seems like Offerfit is probably going to work out quite well. How are you feeling about additional M&A? Like when might you be ready? And what might you be interested in looking at?

William Magnuson

Analyst

So I think we're happy with how the integration is going, as I mentioned earlier, and we have an active CorpDev and product strategy function here, which looks at both organic and inorganic expansion opportunities. I'm not going to speculate on specific strategy around it other than to reiterate what we've said in the past, which is that we are very selective in terms of opportunities that we look at. We want to make sure that they drive forward a leading product road map and a leading product vision in our space. We think we still have incredible TAM to continue to access a lot of great adjacencies. And so we will continue to look at opportunities, but I'm not going to speculate on any specifics beyond that.

Operator

Operator

There are no more questions at this time. I'd now like to turn the call over to Bill for closing remarks.

William Magnuson

Analyst

Thank you, everyone, for joining us today. We're very excited about the momentum in the business. Thankful for all of your support, and we will chat next quarter.