Earnings Labs

The Joint Corp. (JYNT)

Q1 2023 Earnings Call· Sun, May 7, 2023

$9.12

+0.39%

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Transcript

Operator

Operator

Good day, and welcome to The Joint Corp. First Quarter 2023 Financial Results Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] Please note, this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to David Barnard of LHA Investor Relations. Please go ahead.

David Barnard

Analyst

Thank you, Dave. Good afternoon, everyone. This is David Barnard of LHA Investor Relations. On the call today, President and CEO, Peter Holt, will review our first quarter 2023 performance metrics and provide an update on the business. CFO, Jake Singleton, will detail our financial results and guidance. Then Peter will close with a summary and open the call for questions. Please note, we are using a slide presentation that can be found at https://ir.thejoint.com/events. Today, after the close of the market, The Joint Corp. issued its financial results for the quarter ended March 31, 2023. If you not already have a copy of this press release, it can be found in the Investor Relations section of the company's website. As provided on Slide 2, please be advised today's discussion includes forward-looking statements including statements concerning our strategy, future operations, future financial position and plans and objectives of management. Throughout today's discussion, we will present some important factors relating to our business that could affect these forward-looking statements. The forward-looking statements are made based on our current predictions, expectations, estimates and assumptions and are also subject to risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ materially from the statements we make today. Factors that could contribute to these differences include, but are not limited to, our inability to identify and recruit enough qualified chiropractors and other personal to staff our clinics, due in part to the nation-wide labor shortages and an increase in operating expenses due to measures we may need to take to address such shortage; inflation, exacerbated by COVID-19 and the current war in Ukraine, which has increased our cost and which could otherwise negatively impact our business, the potential for future disruption to our operations and the unpredictable impact on our business of the COVID-19…

Peter Holt

Analyst

Thank you, David, and I welcome everybody to the call. As we noted in March we enter 2023 with a 45 foundation to support our clinics as well as our longterm clinic expansion and financial growth. Today, I'm pleased to report on Q1, 2023 we performed well during the continued economic uncertainty and expect our robust underlying clinic model and unit economics to thrive as markets improved. For those investors who are new to the company, the Joint is revolutionising access to chiropractic care by providing an affordable cost share style membership based services and convenient retail setting. Turning to slide 4 let's review our financial metrics for the first quarter 2023 compared to first quarter 2022. System wide sales grew 17%. Comp sales for clinics have been open for at least 13 full months increased 8%. Revenue grew 27%. Adjusted EBITDA improved to $2 million. And on March 31, 2023, our unrestricted cash was $14.8 million compared to $9.7 million on December 31, 2022. Turning to slide 5, I'll discuss our clinic metrics. During Q1, 2023 we opened 33 clinics 29, franchised and 4 Greenfield. This compares to 31 clinics 27 franchising and 4 Greenfield in Q1, 2022. Our greenfield strategy look like clinic sites where there will be a capture where they'll capture pent up demand in new markets where they can rapidly build a solid presence. This quarter we augmented existing clinic clusters in California, Georgia, Missouri and North Carolina. As previously stated in 2023, we are focusing on supporting our existing greenfield clinic portfolio as it matures and moderating our pace of new greenfield openings. In the first quarter of 2023, we closed one franchise clinic which will be relocated. That compares to closing one franchise clinic in the first quarter of 2022. Once again, our…

Jake Singleton

Analyst

Thank you, Peter. Turning to slide 8, I'll review the financial results for Q1, 2023 compared to Q1, 2022. System wide sales for all clinics open for any amount of time increased to $115.4 million up 17%. System wide comp sales for all clinics open 13 months or more increased 8%. System wide comp sales for mature clinics open 48 months or more increased 1%. Revenue was 28.5 million dollars up $6 million or 27%. Company owned or managed clinic revenue increased 36% contributing $17.1 million. Revenue from franchise operations increased 15% contributing $11.3 million. The increases represent continued growth in both the corporate portfolio and franchise base. Cost of revenues was $2.6 million, up 13% over the same period last year, reflecting the associated higher regional developer royalties and commission. Selling and marketing expenses were $4.2 million up 27% over the same period last year driven by an increase in advertising fund expenditures from a larger franchise base and increase in local marketing expenditures by the company owned or managed clinics and the timing of our national marketing funds spend. Depreciation and amortization expenses increased $713,000 up 44% compared to the prior year period, primarily due to the increase in the number of greenfield clinics developed and franchise clinics acquired. G&A expenses were $19.9 million compared to $15.4 million up 30%. Reflecting the cost of support the increased clinic count revenue growth and higher payroll to remain competitive in the tight labor market. Operating loss was $678,000 compared to a loss of $176,000 in Q1, 2022, mostly driven by the previously mentioned higher depreciation and amortization expensive. Other income was $3.8 million, reflecting the receipt of employee retention credits, compared to other expensive $16,000 in Q1 of 2022. Income tax expense, including the impact of the employee retention credits…

Peter Holt

Analyst

Thanks, Jake. Turn slide 10. While managing today's uncertain economic conditions including inflation and wage pressure, we remain focused on what we can control and continue to execute programs to improve performance and drive long term growth. We continue to methodically implement our multiyear corporate initiative to ford the chiropractic dream. Over the past several years, we've been increasing our educational outreach efforts with associations and schools of chiropractic to drive awareness and support recruitment. As our relationships with these institutions continue to improve these endeavors are being felt across the network nationwide. In fact, we have more interest than ever from doctors in these recent graduating classes and we're attracting new doctors of chiropractic to the Joint. To harness the power of our data, we've launched our business intelligence and analytical reporting tool, and we're surely launching an automated marketing program. This will reach existing lapsed and potential patients to ensure that we send the right message to the right patient at the right time. To accelerate the pace of our clinic growth, we remain focused on our franchise sales in addition to opening greenfield clinics. As reported this quarter, we continue to increase the number of our clinics opened year-over-year. Our network is well-positioned for expansion as the economy improves, frankly, with only 16% of Americans using chiropractic care in the last 12 months and spending $19.5 billion on it annually the chiropractic patient in need is growing, and our market opportunity is considerable. Based on our current patient demographics, we are approaching our near term target of 1000 clinic and are well positioned for a longer term goal of 2000 clinics. We expand our network and potential base by developing rural, urban and possibly international clinic models, we will broaden our long term market potential. We are committed to capturing a greater share and growing the overall market. With that day, Dave I'm ready to begin the Q&A.

Operator

Operator

We will now begin the question and answer session. [Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from Jeremy Hamblin with Craig-Hallum Capital Group. Please go ahead.

Jeremy Hamblin

Analyst

Thanks so much for taking the questions. I wanted to start by asking about the sales and marketing. it was up about $900,000 sequentially from Q4 and about that same amount on a year-over-year basis. You notice there was a change in the timing of the national marketing fund spend. I wanted to see if you could provide a little bit more detail on how and what that was and how it may impact the rest of the year if there's any other kind of timing differences that we should expect looking forward?

Peter Holt

Analyst

Yes, Jeremy, great question. And I would say the majority of that is just the increase of the collections from the increase clinic count. There is a chunk of that, that is really just timing quarter-to-quarter. Right. So it depends on the timing of certain campaigns or when we're pushing collateral out to the clinics. And so I would categorize that as just a slight front loading in Q1. But we expect that to normalize as we continue on. So there's really no kind of one time item to call out there. I think it's just a slight quarter-over-quarter timing variance.

Jeremy Hamblin

Analyst

Got it. Okay. And then also wanted to just get a little bit more color on the net employee retention credits, which I believe was like $3.9 million. I think I don't know if that's related back to like FICA credits from COVID still, which is similar to what we've seen in the past with other businesses, but wanted to just see if you could help provide a little bit of color on that as well.

Peter Holt

Analyst

Sure, yes. And it is related to some of the jobs act credits that were made available. Our qualification period was four periods in the first two quarters of 2021. And so really the timing of both the application and then the processing through the IRS, so we just happen to receive the funds in the first quarter of '23 which kind of triggered our particular recognition.

Jeremy Hamblin

Analyst

Got it. And if we back that out, that's about the EPS on a normalized basis would be like $0.04 per share loss or so.

Peter Holt

Analyst

That's about right. Yes. It's really that net 3.9. we recorded that in other income. So adjusted EBITDA neutral, but it does have that boost to net income.

Jeremy Hamblin

Analyst

Got it. And then last question, I'd wanted to before I hop out of the queue, I wanted to just get an understanding in terms of what you're seeing for clinic performance corporate versus franchise that look like you saw a nice little step forward here on the company operated clinics, like if we're thinking about it on a, let's call it revenue per average clinic basis whereas you saw maybe a little bit of a step down overall, maybe in the franchisee performance at least certainly the royalties you earned from that basis. I just wanted to get a sense in terms of what you're seeing company operated versus franchise performance.

Peter Holt

Analyst

Yes. I think, in both cases, it's reflecting some of the use within our system. So our corporate portfolio, with the number of clinic additions we've made over the last two years, I think we're going to have a natural leg up on the overall system average, just based on our younger greenfield connects continuing their maturation. Again, when you're talking about overall growth, we added another 29 franchise units in the quarter. And so again, if you're using that end of quarter number as your final denominator there that's going to kind of decrease the revenue on a per clinic basis. So we still posted same store sales of 8% as a system. And again, not a huge disparity there between corporate and franchise performance. So we're still pleased with the organic growth of the unit. But as you look at the denominators, the number of new clinics we have coming into the system, I think you could get some fluctuation there on a revenue per clinic basis.

Peter Holt

Analyst

And then what I'd add to that, Jeremy is that historically, that was an interesting and unusual for a franchise system is that our corporate portfolio as operated parallel or equal to or slightly better than our franchise segment. And that we saw that changed a little bit in as we're coming into the end of '21 and that we made some corrections. And so if you look at kind of the overall performance of '22, that particularly by the end of the year, and '22, we got our corporate portfolio operating equal or better to our franchise portfolio. So we have seen kind of that dip that we went through, we made some changes in those operations. And we're now seeing that come back until we look at some of the key metrics, whether we're talking about conversion, or attrition is that the corporate portfolio continues to do equal or better than our franchise community. The one area where I think that the franchisees continue to do better than corporate, which we're so focused on is our new patient count, and that we're seeing our new franchisees have a higher new patient per clinic per month than the corporate portfolio at the moment.

Jeremy Hamblin

Analyst

Got it. That's great color. Just one more if I could sneak in here, in terms of thinking about kind of mature store comps you can you're seeing just like a little bit of degradation there. And I wanted to get a sense in terms of you know, that price increase that you took last March, what percentage of your patients are on a legacy pricing plan at this point in time?

Peter Holt

Analyst

Yes. We continue to see about a 5% shift per quarter of our active members. Moving on to that, that new price point. I think as I look at the legacy mix now, I think we're trending about 35% of our system is still on some legacy price points. The majority of those being on the pricing one year ago, but because we have an existing current policy to grandfather in active members that their signup rate, we do have some that are they're below that last year. But the majority are our one two year ago or now on the higher price point.

Jake Singleton

Analyst

Ye. And we've talked about that before in that group that's been there for a long time, it's probably around 15% that we e don't see that moving much over time.

Jeremy Hamblin

Analyst

Got it. Thanks so much for taking the questions and best wishes.

Peter Holt

Analyst

Thank you very much.

Operator

Operator

Next question comes from Jeff Van Sinderen with B. Riley. Please go ahead.

Jeff Van Sinderen

Analyst · B. Riley. Please go ahead.

Hi, everyone, and congratulations. It's great to see the 8% comp. Multipart questionnaire if you can bear with me, but wanted to ask a little bit more on the patient retention, attrition, new patient add metrics. I guess any more color you can share around that? And what do you think will drive the new patient as backup power? And then maybe also, how are you faring in terms of the Google search and location elements that I know where there were some changes there? And then any change you're seeing in terms of influencing new patient ads, given the macro backdrop? And then would it make sense to promote more on price to get new patient ads? I know a lot there apologize.

Peter Holt

Analyst · B. Riley. Please go ahead.

I'm going to try to remember all of those components. I mean, what you're really saying is I really focused on Jeff has, of course, new patient counseling. So are we [indiscernible] and if you look at that, in terms of where do our new patients accounts come from. They're really three sources, as we talked about before. Number one referral it's existing patients who refer their friends and family to come in and use the services of our clinic. And that's an all medical professionals that's probably the number one source of a new patient counts. And for us, that's probably averaging right around 35% on a network basis of are coming into the clinic, because have they been referred by a friend or family. Well, it's interesting to watch over time is how increasingly the digital marketing campaign is essentially a part of our new patient count. So right now, we can track today that roughly 63% of our new patients have touched us digitally. So and which where we can measure and patient attribution is always a little tricky, because if you go online, because you saw the ad, or use the TV or whatever was a coupon, but that's increasingly more important to us. And that's when we really saw that change in algorithm with Google Web [indiscernible] it became a higher rating or higher metric to push you up in the SEO search, and that we did make a series of changes to address that. Some of them we can't because [indiscernible] and so if you've got three clinics in front of you, wherever that patients who's doing that searches, that's going to change that search order. What we can do, as yet really focused on optimizing our microsites and making sure that we've got…

Jeff Van Sinderen

Analyst · B. Riley. Please go ahead.

Okay, that's really helpful. And then any color you can give us if there are any changes, you're seeing an underlying trend so far in Q2 maybe that you're seeing versus Q1 or Q2 last year? Just any other color here since the quarter ended?

Peter Holt

Analyst · B. Riley. Please go ahead.

Well, we typically obviously, don't comment on upcoming quarters, because you will get to the about three months. But what I say is for all of us is that we're in a time of kind of economic uncertainty. And I don't know we're not in a recession, but there's a lot of concern about it, we've got the other thing, failures are spooking everybody and that. And so we did. I think for all of us, we're trying to figure out what comes next in the second quarter, the third quarter, the fourth quarter. And so what we're really focused on Jeff, is all the things that we can control. And so all that can be associated with new patient count, making sure that we're as effective as possible in one of our key metrics, which is conversion, conversion new patients to our membership. And so for last year, 84% of our sales were new membership. And so we're really happy we're seeing, for example, for the quarter is our new pace, our conversion rate is right over 50%, which is it was a very, very high number for us. So we're really excited about that. The other metric that we really pay attention to is that the attrition rate, so how long do they stay with us? When did they drop off? And so we've seen that attrition rate continued to stay very low or to improve. And so those are the things that we can really focus on, as we all try to figure out what's going to happen to Q2 and beyond.

Jeff Van Sinderen

Analyst · B. Riley. Please go ahead.

What do you think and then just as a follow up to that, Peter, what do you think that I mean, let's just say we do go into recession maybe high probability that we do people will still are not going to want to live with pain, even in a recession, when you think they'd prioritize getting that pain handled.

Peter Holt

Analyst · B. Riley. Please go ahead.

Absolutely. And then again, we haven't really, as a system ever gone through a full recession. But I follow that logic, Jeff, is that as people are tightening their belts and making decisions, it feels like they're going to be more willing to give up that cup of coffee or that frozen yogurt, then pain relief. I think another thing that too, that we think about as we go through whatever this economic uncertainty is going to be is that right now that our ideal family income is between 50,000 and 105,000. And so that is not a that high end person who is our typical customer or patient. And so what that means it's very often when we go into those markets, where you have a really high income per capita, is that we're quite frankly too inexpensive for them. It's like no, no, no, my son is going to have $125 to adjustment, not a $29 adjustment. But I think is that economic concern filters to a greater part of the economy and more people are in fact changing those decisions or trying to be more thoughtful in their spend, I think you are going to see the top of that funnel open up a little bit and say, well how bad can that $29 adjustment be? And so, we'll see that. But I do think that there's a real opportunity for the upper end of that funnel opened up a little bit at the bottom of that funnel as it relates to income per capita time's up.

Jeff Van Sinderen

Analyst · B. Riley. Please go ahead.

Makes sense. Okay, thanks for taking my questions. I'll take the rest offline.

Peter Holt

Analyst · B. Riley. Please go ahead.

Thank you very much.

Operator

Operator

Our next question comes from George Kelly with ROTH Capital Partners. Please go ahead.

George Kelly

Analyst · ROTH Capital Partners. Please go ahead.

Hey, everybody, thanks for taking my question. So maybe to start with a couple of my [indiscernible] segments. Just curious, on the profitability there. How much visibility do you have? It seems like the whole plan of the maturation of these new stores and everything the margin improvement has been kind of spotty. Another quarter of I would call kind of mixed looks like there was negative operating income in that in that segment again. So I guess two part question is, what is the visibility like there for the rest of the year? And aside from the maturation of these new clinics, what else can you do to drive margin in that business?

Peter Holt

Analyst · ROTH Capital Partners. Please go ahead.

Yes. Good question George. We have clear visibility down to the individual clinic level. And we're going through a lot of effort, with a key focus on trying to maintain and drive sequential improvement in that profitability. And so that's really the expectation. We're still in a period where we have a lot of young units in that portfolio and they're still working through their growth curves. And so with that, you're still going to have the margin suppression. But as we look throughout the remainder of the year I am going to be looking for sequential improvement in that segment. We mentioned it in the transcript, we're also kind of looking at our labor optimization and trying to make sure that we have the correct staffing levels given our volumes to make sure that we're optimized as it relates to that inside the four wall labor component. And so those are when you have labor that's 50% or more of your unit level cost, depending on age that's a critical component that we're staying focused on because that's a real way that we can control the profitability within each of the units themselves. So it's a critical focus of ours. We're going to continue to work with our operators and continue to drive that. But again, as the clinics mature we're looking for that sequential improvement quarter-over-quarter.

George Kelly

Analyst · ROTH Capital Partners. Please go ahead.

Okay, and then, second question, same kind of topic, but if we stripped out the new clinics, and just talks about your legacy owned business, is the four wall margin on that store base has that stabilized? Or is that still seeing labor pressure, and it still is compressing a bit?

Peter Holt

Analyst · ROTH Capital Partners. Please go ahead.

I think we are starting to see some stabilization there. As I look at for wall margin numbers for my mature base, and I'll call that greater than four years we're still doing that mid 20% four wall margin, which, again factors in the labor pressures that we've seen over the last two years, and I've seen it kind of settle in there. We just released our Franchise Disclosure Document for 2023. And I think as you look at the P&L that were submitted by our franchisees, I think they put up a four wall margin in the high 20% as I look at the 358 P&L collected as part of that item 19, item 19 exercise. So we're still seeing overall holding power for our units, even at maturity, and still putting off that strong four wall margin potential that we've always talked about. So the good news is I think we are starting to see some of the labor pressures start to plateau a little bit. And so I'm encouraged by that. We just have to continue to focus on driving the same top line growth to those clinics.

George Kelly

Analyst · ROTH Capital Partners. Please go ahead.

Okay, that's helpful. And then last one. Back to the new patient discussion. I'm still a little unclear exactly sort of what the issue is there. And I guess, just to be specific and more specific, are there any kind of competitive issues that you see that have arisen people become more challenging, that you're facing in certain markets or anything or anything else, you can isolate that's impacting new patients?

Peter Holt

Analyst · ROTH Capital Partners. Please go ahead.

Sure, George, and I'll take that I'm going to answer your second question first is that are we seeing an impact of competitive markets on kind of performance or new patient counts? And what I would say is that I have never worked for a franchise system that has a higher or greater first mover advantage than this one, and yes, we are seeing increasingly some competitors. They are still very small and very localized. And so if I look at it as an overall basis, I would answer no, I don't think that's been a factor influencing the performance of the product. If we look at a specific market where other chain has a presence in the Chicago market, or in a specific Atlanta market, then sure there's definitely going to be some competitors there. And, and we are seeing them grow. I mean, so I'm not seeing that out there. But I'm surprised on how slow they're growing. And that yes, over time, I would expect them to have impact on the overall market. But I think there's so much potential for the market itself. I think that's our biggest opportunity is to grow the market.

Peter Holt

Analyst · ROTH Capital Partners. Please go ahead.

To answer your question on the kind of the new patient kind of what's driving that is that there's no question that as digital marketing campaign becomes more and more important in our new patient drive, is that we really did see that impact with Google when they changed the algorithm because the majority of our online patients were driven by the SEO search. Now we have both paid and organic search. Our paid search continues to perform well. We're seeing a close rate of that that's been continued to stay strong. So that's working for us. But that's been a smaller portion of those leads that are coming online towards us. It's organic search that will with a greater portion of those new patients. And so we are seeing recovery from the changes that Google made. This wasn't first time that Google made changes in their algorithm, and it won't be the last. And so that we're just as you're continually focusing on making those changes so that we can maximize opportunity, specifically in that digital realm, which is only becoming more and more critical for us in terms of that new patient drive.

George Kelly

Analyst · ROTH Capital Partners. Please go ahead.

Thank you.

Operator

Operator

Our next question comes from Anthony Vendetti with Maxim Group. Please go ahead.

Anthony Vendetti

Analyst · Maxim Group. Please go ahead.

Yes, thanks. So first I guess on the on the patient volumes. You mentioned, Peter, that I think you've mentioned this in the past calls as well, that patients are more likely to forego the cup of coffee or something else than their joint treatment? Do you still feel that's the case because they may have to forego the cup of coffee and a joint treatment with inflation and higher interest rates? So I'm just wondering, is your data up-to-date with what's been transpiring over the last couple of months? Has any of that changed? And if so, how?

A - Peter Holt

Analyst · Maxim Group. Please go ahead.

Well, it's a great question, Anthony. And the challenges is, I don't have a lot of data in the sense that this company, we were formed in 2010, we've never gone through a recession other than the quick dip in the COVID period, which I'm not sure would be relevant to the conversation. So we have yet to really go through a traditional recession as a an organization so that I could give you data on what the impact it had on our overall sales. And what I would say as well, as I know, we are in this time of economic uncertainty, and there's a lot of people out there that believe a recession is imminent, but at least in the terms of the traditional measurement of that. And one of them being a high unemployment rate, we're not there yet. And so when we look at, okay, what impact that's had, we can talk about the full year for last 2022, we had a an overall 9% increase in comps. And that was kind of the year of uncertainty. Because that gives us a sense of what's going on in the clinic level, if we look at Q1, 2023, we had an 8% comp rate which again, gives an indication that they're still [indiscernible] coming into the clinic, using our services, in this environment of whatever is influencing the decisions we're making as consumers. And you're right, and it's more anecdotal than data driven. But when we think about what people choices that they're going to make with their discretionary income, and it really is a belief that pain relief is going to take a greater weight than some of these other, more optional choices that we make if people start tightening their belt. Pain is a huge issue, and it's not going away. And that's I think, again, one of the drivers of the success of this concept of just how effective it is in helping people manage that pain and stay out of pain.

Anthony Vendetti

Analyst · Maxim Group. Please go ahead.

Yes, no, fair point. Just last question on the digital marketing initiatives. I know you measure things very closely. Just can you talk about do you have this measurement where as you're spending dollars on digital marketing? Which platforms and sites? What's working better? How have you transition from one to another? And do you feel like in this environment, you have to spend more to get the same type of patient interaction and eventual conversion?

Peter Holt

Analyst · Maxim Group. Please go ahead.

Really a great question. And there's no, the short answer is yes, our whole digital marketing strategy is evolving by the day. We just think a few years ago, TikTok wasn't even a word that would be talking about and now it's a very young billion users and all kinds of issues around it, but it seems to be effective way of marketing for us. And so that's where we're putting more dollars than before. I'd say in terms of the overall spin. And you see that in the P&L is that it's not so much that we are increasing the overall marketing spend. But what we're doing is reallocating that into those sources where we see having a greater impact. So one of the trends that we're seeing is our spin on meta which at one point was kind of being pulled back and that's really where we didn't think our customers were. We've been doing some more work with that we've been increasing some of the allocating more of the spend toward meta, and that we are, quite frankly, seeing some really positive results of that. And so going forward in the next quarter or two, we're going to continue to see an increase on that meta spend and maybe less on the YouTube spend, which we do a lot. And so we're constantly evaluating where are those leads coming from and that's the power of marketing today when I first gotten into my career and I've never been in the marketing discipline, but you do this spend and you have no idea what impact it would have. And so I do my radios or I do my TV and hopefully get a 2% return on whatever. Well, in this day and age, everything is measurable. And that's…

Anthony Vendetti

Analyst · Maxim Group. Please go ahead.

Okay, great. Thanks, Peter. I really appreciate that. I'll hop back in the queue.

Peter Holt

Analyst · Maxim Group. Please go ahead.

Thank you very much. Appreciate the sport.

Operator

Operator

This concludes our question and answer session. I would like to turn the conference over to Peter Holt for any closing remarks.

Peter Holt

Analyst

Thank you. Before I close, I want to note that we will hold our annual meeting of stockholders on May 25 here in Scottsdale, Arizona, and we will also present and conduct meetings at the B. Railey Securities investor conference on May 24th in Los Angeles, and the virtual Oppenheimer consumer growth and e-commerce conference on June 13. Finally, as we're constantly receiving patient testimonials, and this spring, an athlete and parent managing several elements caught our attention. So Miriam from California wrote us and said, I can't say enough about these healers. I have significant and severe chronic spine injuries including degenerative disc disease, bone spurs, osteoarthritis, and bulging herniated discs. I'm an athlete and live a very healthy life that demands a high level of activity and energy output daily. The Joint doctors have been treating me for over a year now along with my son who's five. These magical masters helped me bring my body back in alignment. So it's not an agonizing pain and limiting my demanding life. They're always immensely kind and playful with my little one and never mind me bringing him in or rushed me. I'm very picky about my care team and I promise you won't be sorry coming in for relief from these gems. With my new breast cancer diagnosis I'm even more vigilant about self care. And these angels are my supportive network for good. Thank you and stay well [indiscernible].

Operator

Operator

The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.