David Travers
Analyst · JPMorgan.
Yes. Great question. So one, on the competition front, as we've talked about before, we work with over 1,000 different job sites, many of the big offline players are customers of ours. What we're clearly seeing is economy-wide not just ZipRecruiter-specific. And so from a customer -- from a -- excuse me, from a competitor standpoint, what we've seen is like us, they're also pulling back to the extent they're investing in go-to-market, marketing investments and things like that. And we see them -- some of them pulling back in terms of more aggressive pricing that they had been attempting to roll out earlier in the year. Those have been the big things we've seen on the competitive front. We spend most of our time thinking about our customers rather than our competitors. And from a customer standpoint, what we're hearing is what I referred to earlier, which is in the short term, cautiousness; in the long term, big ambitions about where people want to go, and we feel really confident in the long-term health of the U.S. labor economy and the role we'll play in driving that forward over the long term. In terms of enterprise, great question. You're exactly right. The big theme is we're seeing a pullback across the board in short-term demand for hiring and job openings. But it's more broad-based than it was in terms of creeping into enterprise part of our business, not just SMBs. So last quarter, enterprise was -- that performance marketing component of our revenue that was 23% of revenue last quarter, came down to 22%. So it decreased by slightly more, but the much bigger trend was the across-the-board trend. When we talk to enterprises, they have to plan more, they have to budget further ahead, they have big infrastructure projects to help them with their hiring needs when you need to hire thousands and thousands of people. And they're looking for efficiencies, they're looking for ways to get more efficient in an environment like this. But nothing has foundationally changed about the fact they need a lot more people to, A, just replace churn, that's normal within their workforce and, B, to grow as they expand locations into new lines of business, et cetera. And we're going to be part of that and every indication we have as we establish those relationships like Ian and I -- Ian just referenced, we spent time with 30 of our largest customers last week and we heard that loud and clear from them and about their long-term alignment with us and long-term need for great talent. So that's what we see in enterprise, and we'll continue to focus on our customers, and we feel confident that the competition aspect of this will work itself out just fine when we're close to our customers.