Instructure Announces Solid Earnings and an Acquisition


These days, every subindustry needs a software-as-a-service player. The business model is powerful, and the long-term economics are an investor’s dream. The education sector has a bona fide leader in Instructure (NYSE:INST). The company has a cloud platform for educational institutions, called Canvas; a tool to measure student progress in real time, called Gauge; a platform for employers to educate their workers, called Bridge; and a video-based learning tool, called Arc.

Fourth-quarter earnings showed solid growth on the top line and a new acquisition. But most importantly, the company showed remarkable leverage, giving investors hope that profitability may come sooner than expected. 

Illustration of teacher conducting online learning session


Image source: Getty Images.

Instructure earnings: The raw numbers

Let’s first look at how the company performed during the fourth quarter from a high level.

Metric Q4 2018 Q4 2017 Growth
Revenue $56.3 million $44.8 million 26%
EPS* ($0.01) ($0.20) N/A
Free cash flow ($22.4 million) ($30.0 million) N/A

Data source: Instructure. *EPS presented on non-GAAP basis.


Recurring revenue, which backs out the low-margin service revenue that comes from onboarding schools and companies to Instructure’s cloud, also grew 26% to $51 million. 

What’s really impressive is this: While revenue grew 26%, operating expenses grew just 7%. Under the guidance of new CEO Dan Goldsmith, Instructure has been focusing intently on streamlining spending decisions and cutting costs. Those decisions have obviously paid off. Sales and marketing spending, for instance, grew just 8% after backing out stock-based compensation, which demonstrates impressive leverage in getting customers in the door.


One area to keep an eye on is research and development spending. R&D increased just 1% from last year. While cutting expenses is good, shareholders don’t want to see Instructure trading in future growth potential — which needs R&D dollars to develop — for short-term profitability boosts.

That said, Goldsmith outlined major growth initiatives for the year ahead that will no doubt help address those concerns. More on that in a moment.

Perhaps most important was that net revenue retention remained above 100%. What that means is that schools and companies that sign on to Instructure’s platform are staying with it. It is sticky and reliable, and represents a growing moat around the company.


What else happened during the quarter?

While this won’t be an exhaustive list, Instructure announced a number of customer sign-ons of note. For the Bridge platform, these included:

Software company ETQ, which will use Bridge to help train over 100,000 customers. Pet-supply company Chewy, which will use Bridge Learn for over 10,000 employees.  Pacific Financial, which signed on to use Bridge Learn and Practice for 3,000 representatives and clients. Harvard Medical School, which will use Bridge Practice for training in clinical research programs.


The Canvas platform also announced a number of new customers, including:

The University of California-San Diego and its 34,000 students. Tecnologia de Monterrey in Mexico and its 200,000 students. Two Australian colleges with a combined enrollment of 80,000 students. Our Lady of Fatima in the Philippines, with over 70,000 students.

Management made it clear, however, that new customer bookings for Canvas in the United States were getting harder and harder to come by as Instructure grabs more of the market.

Instructure also announced that it will acquire Portfolium. The company has been a partner of Instructure’s for a number of years, so the two know each other quite well. Portfolium focuses on showcasing student work through an “ePortfolio” network. In plain English, it’s a more comprehensive way of demonstrating what a student is possible of beyond just grade point averages or test scores.


The deal has yet to officially close. But when it does, Portfolium will bring along the 4.6 million students; 40,000 educators; 3,600 high schools, colleges, and universities; and 200-plus partner institutions it works with.

Looking ahead

Goldsmith teased that the company has six major growth initiatives to tackle in 2019. He was willing to share only three of them.

Continuing to drive the connection between the education and professional worlds. Portfolium is the linchpin of this strategy. An analytics, data science, and artificial-intelligence (AI) tool dubbed DIG. While details were scant, Goldsmith said by using the data Instructure has collected and feeding it through AI, DIG could potentially double the company’s total addressable market in education. Two new products for Bridge, which has already added a number of new products over the past two years. No details about the two products were given.

And if you want hard numbers, Instructure provided the following guidance for the quarter and year ahead.

Time Frame Revenue (Midpoint) EPS (Non-GAAP Midpoint)
First-quarter 2019 $57.2 million ($0.15)
Full-year 2019 $258 million ($0.62)

Data source: Instructure.

To put these figures in perspective, first-quarter and full-year revenue are expected to grow by 19% and 23%, respectively. First-quarter earnings, on the other hand, are expected to show losses that narrow by 30%,  while full year losses will essentially be the same.

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