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Technology - Information Technology Services - NASDAQ - US
$ 4.74
-1.04 %
$ 226 M
Market Cap
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P/E
EARNINGS CALL TRANSCRIPT
EARNINGS CALL TRANSCRIPT 2020 - Q3
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Operator

Welcome to TTEC's Third Quarter 2020 Earnings Conference Call [Operator Instructions]. This call is being recorded at the request of TTEC. I would like to turn the call over to Paul Miller, TTEC's Senior Vice President, Treasurer, Investor Relations Officer. Thank you, sir. You may begin..

Paul Miller Head of Investor Relations, Senior Vice President & Treasurer

Thank you, operator, and good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining. TTEC is hosting this call to discuss its third quarter earnings results for the period ended September 30, 2020. Participating on today's call are Ken Tuchman, our Chairman and Chief Executive Officer and Regina Paolillo, our Chief Financial and Administrative Officer.

Yesterday, TTEC issued a press release announcing its financial results. While this call will reflect items discussed within those documents for complete information about our financial performance, we also encourage you to read our third quarter 2020 quarterly report on Form 10-Q.

Before we begin, I want to remind you that matters discussed on today's call may include forward-looking statements related to our operating performance, financial goals and business outlook, which are based on management's current beliefs and assumptions.

Please note that these forward-looking statements reflect our opinions as of the date of this call, and we undertake no obligation to revise this information as a result of new developments that may occur.

Forward-looking statements are subject to various risks, uncertainties and other factors that could cause our actual results to differ materially from those expected and described today. For a more detailed description of our risk factors, please review our 2019 annual report on Form 10-K and our third quarter 2020 quarterly report on Form 10-Q.

A replay of this conference call will be available on our website under the Investor Relations section. I will now turn the call over to Ken Tuchman, TTEC's Chairman and Chief Executive Officer.

Ken?.

Ken Tuchman Founder, Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

first, I'll discuss how companies must adjust to rapidly changing consumer behaviors, this is requiring digital-first, fully-virtualized and seamless solutions to excel in this on-demand work-from-home environment; second, I'll illustrate how our track record of delivering digital transformation is enabling us to win a meaningful share of on-demand work-from-home opportunities; and third, I'll highlight how the record size of our pipeline feeds growth, further capitalizing on these sustainable trends.

This underscores our continued momentum going into the fourth quarter and beyond. Our world was already rapidly transforming to a more digitized and virtualized and direct-to-consumer future.

The current environment has only accelerated this transformation, exposing a significant gap in the virtual delivery of customer experience for the majority of large Global 2000 organizations. Their frontline operations and customer support infrastructures are still far too brick-and-mortar focused.

They are simply not nearly digitized or agile enough to master the last mile and on-demand experience that customers now require. This massive technical deficit has led to a mad dash to remediate what has become a global digital virtual divide. Organizations are being forced to meet a sudden and permanent shift in consumer behavior.

Those who are truly digital-first are thriving, others must get there quickly or risk obsolescence. This step change is creating a groundswell of demand for TTEC. We are benefiting from our well-honed capabilities and expertise in optimizing and automating the customer journey for large-scale organizations.

This is accomplished by rapidly deploying our pre-integrated best-of-breed CX technology ecosystem alongside delivering operational excellence. Our delivery of customer engagement is serving as the foundation to our record third quarter financial results. Our ongoing momentum has been underscored by this rapid paradigm shift.

We are delighted with the continued diversity and high-quality nature of our bookings across new and existing commercial and government clients. We're seeing larger average deal sizes and compressed sales cycles that have been contributing to our outperformance.

Another important contributing factor is that consumers are waking up to the inherent constraints and inconveniences of doing business in person. Customer mobility has been dramatically curtailed by the current environment, further highlighting the advantages of virtual engagement.

Our cloud-based digital-first platform is essential for large-scale consumer and public sector brands seeking unique, differentiated on-demand customer experience. For example, we're making it easier for physical retailers to rapidly shift to e-commerce and click-to-home or curbside delivery. Banks are becoming more automated and branchless.

Dine-in restaurants are delivering and dining experiences to the home. Health care providers are adopting virtual patient treatment models at scale. Automotive companies are converting to virtual selling models. Governments are adopting virtualized citizen engagement program.

Everything else that has moved to at-home from exercise to streaming, the list goes on. As the consumer experience transforms and transcends to a digital virtual model, the millions of employees who serve them must also transform to a digital virtual model. TTEC is at the epicenter of this transition.

While the overall complexity of work rises, the need for platforms that accommodate channel diversity, intelligent automation, just-in-time analytics, fraud detection and prevention and a highly skilled and engaged workforce is escalating. TTEC provides the best-of-breed end-to-end technology and operational execution.

This is absolutely required for large corporations and governments to seamlessly engage with their consumers and citizens at scale. Here are a few recent examples of competitive wins illustrating why clients are choosing TTEC to execute the most progressive industry-leading customer and employee experiences.

A multinational financial services client was faced with sudden volume spikes attributed to fulfilling unemployment benefits through its prepaid card division. Our client needed a highly secure and scalable technology and citizens' engagement platform.

We swiftly designed and implemented TTEC's omnichannel Humanify Cloud at-home solution, taking their 400 brick-and-mortar employee base to 3,000 virtual workers in a matter of weeks.

They selected us based on our tenured and demonstrated partnership as well as the ability to provide turnkey technology and operational execution via our CX-as-a-Service platform. Importantly, what began as a surge based unemployment benefits program has now been extended into a multiyear engagement.

The scope of our work with this client has further extended into an additional line of business optimizing claims investigation. The next example illustrates how TTEC supports the enormous consumer shift to home delivery. We partnered with a nationwide Digital consumer food delivery service.

Consumer demand for contactless food delivery continues to grow rapidly. We implemented our Humanify Connect omni-channel platform complemented with our best-of-breed CX application stack and includes a knowledge management system, voice of customer platform and intelligent routing capabilities.

In less than two weeks, we rolled out over 100 flexible at-home Humanify associates in an optimal mix that created employee efficiencies and prepared the client for volume spikes. After just 90 days, we have doubled the capacity across chat and voice channels, and now have entered into a multiyear partnership.

We also recently partnered with Citizens Bank. To enable a cloud-based omnichannel conversational messaging solution. Sales and service, banking conversations will be available via asynchronous SMS messaging, Facebook Messenger, Apple Business Chat, Google Business message and live video chat in real-time.

Our cloud solution senses customer intent, then analyzes and routes customers to the appropriate digital or human associate. We also manage associate workload, understand the conversational sentiment, and via our machine learning uncover trending topics.

The solution has improved capacity utilization and optimized interactions by rapidly deploying AI-enabled conversational messaging. Further, it has allowed customer service associates to triple the number of customers handled concurrently. The solution dramatically reduces voice volumes, routing lower complexity, voice interactions to messaging.

The clincher to all of this is that we continue to see improved customer satisfaction scores. The current crisis has created a structural shift that is the latest in a long line of catalyst adding to an already large and growing CX technology and services addressable market.

When the dust finally settles, we expect third or more of the global customer engagement workforce who historically interacted with customers face-to-face or in a brick-and-mortar engagement centers to have permanently shifted to work, to virtual work-from-home environments.

To capitalize on this momentum, our 3 main focuses are to continue growing within our embedded base of iconic clients to further penetrate higher growth geographies like EMEA and to increase our success within our key growth verticals. Our CX-as-a-Service platform is the key enabler that underpins all these main growth vectors.

We have a tremendous pipeline related to enabling our embedded client base to digitize and virtualize. We have a whole new opportunity set in assisting our long-term clients to build out Digital channels beyond physical retail and voice.

We are capturing opportunities by helping clients create contextually connected and digital-first customers' earnings. We are expanding customer engagement to diversify channels such as SMS, texting, chat, Co-browsing, live video and all other forms of intelligent automation, leveraging AI, machine learning and RPA.

We are also seeing meaningful traction in EMEA as our CX-as-a-Service platform continues to accelerate there. Our expanded EMEA resources are increasing their focus on the full complement of both Digital and Engage, as one TTEC, which delivers on the promise of true end-to-end CX-as-a-Service.

Our success here with large clients like VW and others, our serving as a foundation in the building of EMEA's business, growing organically at approximately 40% on an annualized basis. We have a focused growth strategy that is yielding significant results within our health care, financial services, public sector and technology verticals.

These verticals have huge runway related to heightened client demand for our at-home services platform that enable the remote worker with a suite of hyper automation tools and other high margin, high-growth offerings, such as fraud detection and prevention.

We will continue to further enhance our direct to go-to-market motion with our technology-enabled strategic channel partnerships and high-growth platform acquisitions. Our channel partnerships are an exciting and evolving part of our strategy, creating tremendous synergy by adding industry-leading CX applications into TTEC's Humanify Cloud platform.

Our recent acquisition of VoiceFoundry positions TTEC at the center of Amazon's leading AWS ecosystem. The acquisition of Serendebyte and strategic partnership with Pega Systems expands our intelligent automation capabilities while opening new market opportunities via the Pega ecosystem.

Our strategic partnership with LivePerson creates a compelling growth channel for conversational commerce. With these strategy alliances, TTEC remains at the forefront of intelligently automating our clients' customer journeys with best-in-class CX technology and services, enabling solutions with defined outcomes.

This is delivered through a dedicated team of 2,500 engineers and CX professionals. You can expect much more to come on this front. Combining this with our continued innovation and significant investments we've made in the Humanify Cloud at-home platform differentiates TTEC. It shows in our record financial performance year-to-date.

In closing, we are uniquely positioned as the global end-to-end CX technology and services provider focused exclusively on groundbreaking customer experience and engagement. Our approach to designing, building and operating customer experience as a service is resonating with clients.

Consequently, we're handling increasingly complex, high end and mission-critical customer experience needs. The large commercial enterprise and government landscape is demanding the integration of technology and digital-rich solutions into their customer experience operations at an accelerated pace and scale.

TTEC has the turnkey technology and services platform to uniquely accommodate these requirements. I've never been more proud of our 50,000-plus TTEC team members for their hard work and dedication during this unprecedented and incredibly challenging time.

This has allowed us to successfully serve our clients, execute on our vision and deliver record third quarter financial results despite the headwinds related to the pandemic and social unrest. We're also grateful for the continued support of our shareholders.

Regina will now cover the key financial highlights to the quarter as well as share our updated guidance for the full year. Thank you..

Regina Paolillo

revenue of $1.887 billion, an increase of 14.8%; operating income of $192.4 million, an increase of 48.9%; adjusted EBITDA of $282.1 million, an increase of 34.9%; and adjusted earnings per share of $2.96, an increase of 56.7%.

To obtain our fourth quarter 2020 mix of revenue, operating income, adjusted EBITDA and EPS at the consolidated and segment level, please refer to our commentary in the business outlook section of the third quarter 2020 earnings press release. We will formally provide detailed 2021 guidance in conjunction with our year-end earnings call.

Given our full year 2020 bookings are estimated at over $600 million, and a high percentage of our third and fourth quarter bookings are multiyear in nature. We estimate our Engage business will grow in the 5% to 7% range and our Digital business, excluding the large government contract and exited offerings to grow in the 15% to 25% range.

While we are mindful of the continued uncertainty that persists in the global economy, we are increasingly optimistic on the ability of our business to capitalize on the near and long-term CX market demand.

In closing, we remain intensely focused on our long-term growth drivers, accelerating the volume of large 1 TTEC client programs, continuing to innovate with disruptive Digital CX solutions, leveraging our cloud offerings to modernize the customer experience through our Digital and Engage capabilities, expanding our client base in EMEA and pursuing strategic acquisitions and channel partnerships.

I'll now turn the call back to Paul..

Paul Miller Head of Investor Relations, Senior Vice President & Treasurer

Thanks, Regina. Operator, you may now open the line..

Operator

Thank you, speakers. We will now begin the question-and-answer session. Our first question is from George Sutton of Craig-Hallum. Sir, you may begin..

George Sutton

So Ken, you walked through some of your key partnerships, Amazon, Pega, LivePerson as examples, and you mentioned that there's much more to come on this front.

I'm just curious if you can give us a picture of what the future profile of additional partners might look like? And you also mentioned that it was a big differentiator for you relative to competitors.

Can you just talk through that in terms of that differentiator?.

Ken Tuchman Founder, Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

one is to enable our associates so that they can be more intelligent, more agile, more faster so that they can support the customer in a better, more frictionless way; and the other is to support our clients' customers so that they can interface in a much more modern way. We think that, that is the future of our overall business.

And it's why we're leaning so heavily on the tech side of our business.

It's critical that we have brand ambassadors and live humans that can interact with customers, but it's also equally critical that we have a way of helping our clients' journey map the best possible journeys and making these interactions that their clients, that their customers have as seamless and as frictionless as possible.

We cannot do that if we're only providing the infrastructure and the labor component. We believe that it's got to be an end-to-end set of solutions, and we think that's highly disruptive in the marketplace..

George Sutton

One other thing, if I could. A quarter ago, I sensed the concern despite a large pipeline of opportunities that you felt like some of those opportunities were temporary in nature. And my sense today is you've got a larger pipeline, and you've got a much better sense of a longer duration set of opportunities coming from that.

And I believe Regina pointed to 92% of those bookings as an example. Am I hearing that correctly? To me, that's the significant change we've seen in the last quarter..

Ken Tuchman Founder, Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Yes. I would say that we have stabilized our entire client base as it relates to not only shifting them at-home, but helping them with their surge volumes, et cetera. And we've added multiple new logos, some of which came on with the concept of "Can you help us out temporarily?" Our concept was very simple.

Of course, we're going to help you up temporarily, but we're also going to provide technology, and that technology is hopefully going to become a hook to turn it into a long-term reoccurring relationship. We have successfully done that with major banks, with Government institutions, et cetera.

And so consequently, our third quarter bookings have really a pretty small percentage of surge work, whereas the second quarter bookings was up to 40%. Additionally, what we've said in our, as you heard in our script is that a high percentage of those surge volumes, have now converted to long-term reoccurring revenue contracts.

So going forward, my guess is that fourth quarter, we'll have very little COVID-type related bookings that are on the temporary side. And whatever we end up booking in that area will obviously be transparent, and we will let all of our investors know what that is.

But our focus is on long-term reoccurring revenue, and we feel comfortable that we can continue to win them even in this environment right now. I want to stress that all of our clients, virtually every single one of them has a whole new reality.

And the reality is that they have to figure out how to virtualize their entire interface to the customer and their business. And that is what we've been doing for decades. And so consequently, we kind of feel like we're the longest startup in history that we're finally at the right place at the right time..

Operator

Our next question is from Mike Latimore of Northland Capital Markets..

Mike Latimore

Definitely, it feels like a historic period here.

In terms of your Engage business, can you sort of distinguish how much of the demand is coming from big companies that have internal contact center agents that just can't handle the work-from-home and new technologies versus just growing demand industry-wide for more agents and brand ambassadors, as companies seek to do more remote interactions as opposed to in store?.

Ken Tuchman Founder, Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

I want to make sure I understand your question. So is the question, are you asking, are we seeing a shift of bricks-and-mortar employees' kind of moving out to more of virtual sales associates and customers assist associates? Is that the question? I'm not, I want to just make sure I've got the question right..

Mike Latimore

Yes. So it seems like, obviously really strong demand for your Engage business.

And just wondering if it's big customers that are outsourcing more to you, versus just broader industry demand for kind of agents as opposed to in-store retail?.

Ken Tuchman Founder, Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

So I think it's both. I don't think I know it's both. So it's a combination of large corporations, virtually every one of our clients have large captives. So let's start out with that. And they're spending, in many cases, billions, multiple billions of dollars per year on their captives.

We actually have a thesis that, at some point, we'll get into more discussion with our investors about. But we believe that when you look at the global TAM, there's about $300 billion right now that is tied up in our clients' captives. We think that our clients are coming to the conclusion that they're not as good at this as we are.

And we think that over time, more and more of that captive marketplace is going to peel off and be partnered with somebody like a TTEC. We're only approximately a $2 billion company, and with $300 billion of business, not including the $200 billion or whatever that's already been outsourced, or $100 billion that's already been outsourced.

There's a very, very large pool of business to be had just from the captives alone. So, A, we're seeing that where they're choosing to basically outsource more of what they had in-source. B, we're seeing that many of them didn't have the appropriate technology internally. They weren't in the right geographies.

They weren't able to get enough of their employees to work in a proper at-home environment, et cetera. And so they needed us to help them there. And then what we're just seeing is we're bringing on a lot of new logos of new clients that have historically either outsourced with other partners or have never outsourced at all.

So it's really coming from a multitude of places. And then lastly, I think it goes without saying in-store retail traffic is very, is down to a bare, bare minimum due to the pandemic.

I think what is really important for all of us to acknowledge is that although we think in-store traffic when the pandemic goes away, 1-year-plus from now, we think that traffic will increase. We don't actually think it's ever going to get fully back to where it was in certain industries like supermarkets, like restaurants, et cetera.

We think that people are beginning to realize that there's a new way to do things, and more and more people are going to continue to get food to go and dine-in their own home. More and more people are going to have their groceries serve to their curbside.

More and more people are not going to visit their doctor, but they're going to do with Teledoc-type experience. I could go on and on and on. All that feeds more opportunity for us..

Mike Latimore

And then just in terms of the topic of digitization, that can be a lot of different things. But in terms of kind of messaging volumes, and demand for messaging technology.

I guess, can you talk a little bit about what you're seeing there? How many of your brand ambassadors are increasingly focused on messaging, and just kind of demand among the base for kind of interacting with customers using messaging?.

Ken Tuchman Founder, Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

I think what I would say is it's a bit of a mixed bag. We are really pushing very hard our clients to become omnichannel. And in so we're educating them on the benefits of messaging. There are certain things that we do that frankly messaging clients won't accept.

There are many things that we do that -- what we're doing is kind of getting them to stick their toe in the water by taking, what I would call the more lower level, more basic interactions that have a binary response to it and actually automating it end-to-end.

And then there's others where we're using live humans to interact with the messaging and to provide the live real-time messaging. So I think it's still very early days. But I think over time, we're expecting that this will become a significant portion of our business. We want it to become a significant portion of our business.

But I think it's going to take a few years for sure. Before, it's really a very significant part of our business, more like three to four years. And then hopefully, we would see volumes that would be in the 40% or 50% range of our Engage business. But we're not there yet. And -- but I'm confident that we're going to get there..

Operator

Our next question is from Bhavan Suri of William Blair. Sir, you may begin..

Bhavan Suri

Hey. Thanks for letting my question. And it was a really, really good quarter, really solid bookings. So congratulations. I want to follow-up on George's questions a little bit here on the partnerships, Ken. I guess I'd love to understand how you think about -- they obviously provide you a differentiated solution, which obviously then allows you to sell.

But how do you think about the revenue benefit as you look at the next partnership? How do you think about go-to-market for these parts? I'd love to understand some more nuances in those.

And are any of the incentivized to sell TeleTech?.

Ken Tuchman Founder, Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

So they're definitely incentivized to sell our TTEC Digital, and we're really, in many of these cases, we're the key partner for CX transformation to these companies.

So we're working proactively with these companies on deals where we can bring significant insight and capabilities to that particular deal that maybe was not sourced by our sales force, but in fact, was sourced by their sales force.

And I think that's the crux of what we're really trying to get at is that this is opening up doors into relationships that maybe would have taken us much longer to get to or maybe we never even would have had the opportunity to get to at all. We have successfully done this for many, many years with our deep partnership with Cisco.

It's been very beneficial. And we are basically replicating that set of capabilities with all the appropriate Chinese walls, et cetera, with other partners. So what I would say to you is these are not press release relationships we have active channel partner managers that are working with these companies.

Our sales force is working with these companies. Their sales force is working with our company and we have 1 common goal, and that is to win the deal. And so that is, it's pure and simple. That is what we're focused on doing.

We're only going with technologies that we actually believe in and that we know can provide the best possible solution, and that can help our clients lower their overall cost to serve, while simultaneously driving a better Net Promoter Score. And at the end of the day, that's what our clients care about.

They want the most, they want really 3 things, right? One is they want the best experience for their customer; two is, they want it to be the most efficient as possible and at the lowest overall cost to serve. And that's what we're really driving for with these relationships. We're still very early days. I want to just stress that.

I mean we've been building Digital over the last, call it, decade with spending hundreds of millions of dollars in acquisitions, et cetera, but we're really at very early days on our journey, and we're going to continue to keep focusing on not only channel partnerships, but on future acquisitions that are, that make sense and there are tuck-ins that are additive to our overall strategy..

Bhavan Suri

One more sort of maybe strategic question for you is, today, there's obviously a really nice flywheel between Digital and Engage and serial drives Engage and then Engage can get optimized by Digital. But there's a part where there is, let's say, usage cannibalization, especially with the messaging of the AI.

So today, you may have a number of people supporting a call center function, and then that's going to get reduced because you're going to go to a chat, message, bought, AI optimizes all the rest of it. As you think about that and you think about the levers there, one, obviously, is a higher gross margin.

But do you think you have the ability to kind of raise price in the Digital side as you go through that sort of potential transition? And I'm talking five, 10 years on the road because it's so early now, it doesn't matter. But in maturity, sort of how do we think about that? I'd love to get some thoughts on how you're thinking about that..

Ken Tuchman Founder, Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

So two things, that's a great question. First of all, believe it or not, we hope that it creates cannibalization that has been our focus. Regina will tell you that when she came on over 10 years ago, I told her, that was one of our main goals was to create cannibalization of the Engage business.

But here is the thing that is maybe a little counterintuitive.

Every time we go to a Fortune 500 Company, and we show them a more efficient way of serving their volumes, even though it might take 20% or 30% of their volumes out or their cost down, et cetera, as fast as we take those volumes out, they level them back off by giving us more business because if you were them, wouldn't you want your business to go to wherever it's the most efficient and cost-effective.

So we have zero fear of our Engage business being cannibalized by technology. I want to stress that. Zero fear.

There is so much business out there as far as how big the total addressable market is that if every single client, we were able to show them a 30% cost benefit, et cetera, they can easily give us 30% more business without even blinking an eye.

A high percentage of our clients, maybe we have 10%, maybe we have 20%, in some cases, we might have 40%, but it's rare that we have 100% of their volume. So I want to just put that if there's a fear there, I want to put that to rest. Now let's get to your bigger question about margins.

There's no question that over time as we get better and better at using these AI tools, these machine learning tools, these hyper automation tools, et cetera. We're building our own internal confidence of what we can achieve.

And based on that confidence, we're getting to the point where, over time, our goal will be to change our pricing model in a pretty significant way.

And that would allow us to lean in more and start to instead of Engage being, for example, a time and material shop, it could become more of almost a subscription-type capability where we're charging on a per customer basis and where we're partnered, more deeply partnered with the customer. That's going to take time.

That's going to require very significant data analytics and actuarial tables, et cetera, which we're starting to build all of that, et cetera. But the point is, is that absolutely, we believe that there's an opportunity to drive more margin, not only on the technology side, but also on the Engage side.

But right now, what we're focused on is getting all these core practices built, making sure that we have the geographic diversity. Meaning that we're able to provide these capabilities across the globe and then we can start to really shift our pricing model..

Operator

Our next question is from James Faucette of Morgan Stanley..

James Faucette

Ken, I wanted to touch on really quickly on your comments around success and converting Surge customers and contracts to longer-term engagements.

I guess my question is, as we transition that work to the longer-term nature of the agreements, et cetera, how do you think about the relative revenue potential versus what you're getting from them and the Surge's. Does it go up? Does it go down? Is it same? Just wondering how we should think about the revenue contribution from those customers..

Ken Tuchman Founder, Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Regina, you want to answer that question?.

Regina Paolillo

Yes. I would say the major theme there is the, that certainly has us as confident as we are, is signed agreements with certain governments, in particular States and financial service clients who now have agreements with us into next year, the bulk of next year. So those are signed agreements in the third quarter, and it continued into this quarter.

That now have us with backlog around activities that we're doing, that are either, yes, in some places, we'll stay significant due to the pandemic. But also, in most cases, that we have now processed new lines of business for the States and new lines of business for banks that will become the incumbent now.

In part, that is captive stuff that's being outsourced because of the challenge of getting it to the level of virtualization and digitization. And in particular, a good amount of it being committed to kind of more permanent at-home.

The other piece, I would say, Ken spoke on in that is in some of your commercials in other areas that the behaviors of the consuming public have changed, and they haven't just changed temporarily, they've changed forever more.

And there too, we have agreements that have committed to additional volumes, the way we would have a normal three, four, five year contract. Food delivery would be a good example there. We continue to take -- add new logos in that space..

James Faucette

And then when you look at your overall margins and margin structure is like clearly, like this quarter was really, really good. You're talking about some additional points of leverage there.

How are you thinking about like the margin trajectory? Is that I guess, increasing along with kind of your revenue and engagement and bookings outlook? Or how should we think about that on a go-forward basis?.

Regina Paolillo

I mean I'll bring it back to a comment that I've made repeatedly, but some background first. So we grew our revenue year-to-date about $196 million. We grew our EBITDA margin 300 basis points, or 3 percentage points. That's really one point of improvement for every $65 million of revenue.

I have said a number of times, right, that for every $50 million to $75 million of improvement in revenue, you can count on us for almost one point of margin improvement. So we're kind of in the midpoint of that $50 million to $75 million at $63 million, and so it's no different than what we thought.

I mean, we have a very tenured management team who's been through many seasons. And the reality of it is, there is significant, what I would say, fixed costs that sit in our COGS and sit in our SG&A.

And there is just huge leverage as we add volumes to the top-line in terms of taking those fixed costs and getting them lower and lower as a percentage of revenue. Now in fairness, I will say that travel, which is typically 1.5 points of our revenue is down.

And so that's why I would say we're in the midpoint of that $50 million to $75 million of incremental revenue at the $65 million, giving us another point. But we feel that at these volumes, there's nothing in there that is -- there's nothing that we know of that's going to drive a different behavior.

The other thing I'll just caution on is as we get through our year-end, we are working on the investments that we will continue to make to accelerate the top-line. So you heard me in my comments talk about 15% to 25% in Digital and 5% to 7% in Engage. We're not without our thoughts that, could we take market share that's organic of 10% in Engage.

But that will require some investments in terms of more sales resource, more marketing, maybe accelerating. We're obviously moving very well with Europe, it's contributing nicely.

But do we think about lighting up other regions earlier? So we're going through that thinking at this point, and you can count on us to separate those investments from the underlying margins. But it's really just the model has just really, really very opportunistic expansion on more volume..

James Faucette

And last quick question.

How should we think about capital allocation, particularly given what you would, you may be seeing from an M&A opportunity perspective versus capital returns?.

Regina Paolillo

Well, yes. So that hasn't changed as well. Obviously, we have a dividend, and we're going to continue to drive early returns for our shareholders, but aside from that. It's a balance between organic and inorganic investment in expanding the business. And so you have heard Ken say this a couple of times.

We, internal to TTEC, the way we think about this now is that M&A is not a nice to have. It's a have to have. I would actually say, let's say, corporate development investments is a have to have in the sense that we will continue to think about the investment in partnerships versus the investment in M&A.

But you should continue to expect us to be very aggressive. We're not going to do a deal just to do a deal. But we've got a good track record now over 10 years of acquisitions, and we've honed our internal disciplines around that in terms of front-end integration and middle and back, and we're going to continue to prioritize.

I'm glad to see the cash flow, the free cash flow, the operating cash flow, which are only going to help us to fund those in a very efficient way..

Ken Tuchman Founder, Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Let me just add on to that real quickly.

I think the other thing that I want to stress is that the partnerships and the acquisitions that we will be doing or have already done as well as the internal R&D work that we're doing, it's all about platforming ahead of time so that when clients look to us as providing a solution, a technology-based solution, a digital solution, et cetera, that we can demonstrate to them that we can basically launch them in the shortest possible period of time with the least amount of risk at scale.

We believe that, that is absolutely critical to our success.

And so the reason why we tend to win these very kind of transformative deals like we did with, have done with the Government over and over and over again, et cetera, is because we are able to demonstrate to them what we can do in a matter of weeks, the largest systems integrators in the world need a year plus to do.

And so I can't stress to you that, that is absolutely a big part of our investment thesis, not only from an acquisition standpoint, but investing capital internally to pre-build out platforms so that we can show our clients that we can turn them on quickly and get them into the marketplace with these new set of capabilities that they're looking for.

Right now, clients are focused on what's urgent, not what's important. And consequently, they need solutions that are going to have impact on their business in weeks or in less than 90 days.

They're not focused right now on solutions that are going to take them three years or five years, which is what the traditional systems integrators are focused on.

How do they do a year's worth of consulting and then a year's worth of preparation and then two to three years' worth of implementation, et cetera? Our goal is to get to a reoccurring revenue ability with the client off of our technology off of our SaaS capabilities and off of our Engage capabilities as fast as humanly possible.

So I just want to stress that, that's, it's all going to make more and more sense as we roll out more capabilities on the technology side to the marketplace..

Operator

Our next question is from Joseph Vafi of Canaccord..

Joseph Vafi

Great results. Just a couple of quick ones. First, on the bookings numbers. Maybe drill down a little bit into Digital bookings. And what you're seeing in that market segment now? Obviously, I think the Engage segment, there's maybe a bit of sense of urgency there by clients to have capability.

I'm wondering if you're seeing that in the Digital side as well or kind of compare and contrast the demand environment there. And then just a follow-up maybe for Regina on work-from-home moving forward and implications for CapEx..

Ken Tuchman Founder, Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

So I'll start out and then maybe Regina can pick up from where I leave off. So what we're seeing on the Digital side is our pipeline is really growing quite nicely on what I would call transformative type deals.

But what we're also seeing at the same time is that on the larger, more transformative deals we're also seeing clients saying that they want to get more focused on that when they have more visibility to COVID, to the pandemic. And so I'm sure you're hearing this through a lot of others.

But on the very large clients, I'm talking about, let's just call it, the Fortune 100-type clients, they're all very focused on us building plans for them, et cetera, that really can transform their business.

And in some cases, their start times have been delayed due to the fact that their focus has been on more tactical things like getting them up and running on at-home, et cetera. So on one hand, the pipeline is building nicely, and we're very excited about it.

I would say that on some of the deals, the actual start of the execution is a bit delayed, and the can has been kicked a little bit, which is understandable. When we do channel checks with many of the others on the large deal front, they're seeing the exact same thing.

So instead, what our clients are focused on and what many of the new deals are focused on, is more of the incremental things that instantaneously allow them to get at-home tools for their at-home agents and so on and so forth.

Regina, do you want to add to that?.

Regina Paolillo

Yes. I just want to add that I think if you look at the Digital bookings, which were over $42 million, grew over 11% in the quarter. There's a good half of those bookings, which continue to extend our wallet share on the omnichannel in large companies.

So these are very, very large companies with whom we are working divisionally or working in certain areas or certain countries, but they have a huge opportunity to continue to be additive to the growth of the business.

In particular, as we continue to get our sea legs on making our discrete offerings in the intelligent automation area, much bigger part of the business, as Ken was alluding to, will take a couple of years.

So one, just probably $20 million, $22 million of existing clients who are kind of just continuing to add licenses, if you will, and in components of their business, extending that omnichannel globally and throughout the entire business.

The last thing I would say is, we really shouldn't be lost on the market that one of the main reasons that we are winning in Engage is the conversation that we can have not just about getting folks from home or dealing with fast-growing volumes.

But ultimately, while getting that done as Task 1 into the TTEC ecosystem to be processed, that most of our deals today have initial pilots that aren't significant in terms of the economics for Digital right now.

But once those pilots are laid in and the outcomes are understood, they will become, right, by themselves a significant pipeline for Digital. So some of this is just timing.

But I will tell you that what's been very impressive is that when you reflect on why we won? We are winning because we have that virtualization, that work-from-home, that ability to hire and train and get on these volumes very quickly.

But the second thing is that we're committing to these clients that we are during these 3- and 5-year contracts going to be further enhancing the environments in which they run their customer experience. I think that's an important point.

On the work-from-home, I have to be honest with you right that it's a day by day, and I don't think about this only for the associates. I think about this for our entire 56,000 employee base.

And certainly, it's a hard one to call, but please understand that from the end of February, we have been working on a program of Phase 1, 2 and 3 relative to the reshaping of our real estate facilities portfolio. And it's almost like capacity utilization is a metric of the path at this point as we go through this period.

But I will tell you that the demonstration of our work in that area to refine our real estate portfolio has given us -- gone from about 7.8% of our revenue in real estate to 5.3%. So we're on it. We're working it. It's not something we work on our own. We work it with our clients.

And as Ken has said before, we feel that when all is said and done, we could have as much as 50% of our Engage business being done from at-home.

And the key here now is to kind of call the sites that -- not so much in Phase 1 and Phase 2, but the Phase 3 sites that we might edit out of our portfolio and/or actually expand, there's more conversations with clients and more observations of what our competitors are doing and so on..

Operator

Our next question is from Bryan Bergin of Cowen..

Bryan Bergin

I wanted to ask here about some of the moving pieces in Digital. And really, how we should be thinking about the timing and the level of trough revenue in the Digital segment? I understand that the large Government contract is still expected to contribute, I think, moderately here in 4Q and then end.

I know you've got some of the other factors with planned consulting exits and the product declines.

Curious, if you could give us a little bit of clarity on where you get to that base level? And then are there sizable opportunities here in that pipeline that can backfill at a faster rate some of these declines?.

Ken Tuchman Founder, Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

So first of all, you should know that a few years ago, we had very little cross-selling going on between Engage and Digital. And today, we're roughly seeing almost 30% of the deals, so to speak, that are taking advantage now of both. Our goal, obviously, is to get that 30% to 60%.

So I just want to point that out that we are making really good progress on providing what we call a 1 TTEC approach to our embedded base as well as to new prospects. And we think that, that's going to have a significant impact in the future to come.

What I would just simply tell you is, is that we are working, firing on all cylinders and we've been highly focused on selling as many big deals as we can to replace some of the Government work that we had for 2 years, and it's come to an end with the census coming to an end. And I feel very confident that we will hit our growth targets.

And that ultimately, it will, all this will be behind us. Because the majority of all the new business that we're winning on the Digital side is all long-term reoccurring revenue. Long-term beyond two years, meaning it's 3 year, 5-year contracts, et cetera.

Regina, you want to add to that?.

Regina Paolillo

one is we're going to exit this short-term Government contract; the other is that we're, we have a disruptive model. We're moving from what has been an on-prem, a delivery model, which has a different revenue kind of an expense profile, at least in terms of recognition into a cloud. And so I think we're coming into those quarters.

And that is why we've really tried to help to continue to talk about the underlying base business, which is somewhere around $200 million, $210 million coming off of this year will be the base revenue, and we continue to believe that we can grow that base 15% to 25%. We had 11% increase year-over-year in Q3 bookings.

We have significant pipeline for kind of Q4 and Q1 at around $400 million. We see an increasingly and very impressive healthy pipeline from the Amazon Connect acquisition we did. A good part of that $400 million is a pipeline for Cisco Webex CCE. It remains healthy.

And I just, I want to point out that probably the most compelling data point is that we've got $110 million of Digital bookings in the period ended September 30th, $52 million of which is an annual contract value for multiyear recurring revenue agreements.

So if you take that $52 million on our $200 million base because that's what it relates to, right? That is a 25% growth rate. So this is, this business has combination of recurring and nonrecurring. Our professional services are nonrecurring, our cloud services are recurring, three to five year take-or-pay.

And so $52 million of that $110 million is recurring revenue. It's the annual contract, right, for that. And by itself, it's 25% of the base. So we are going to have a couple of quarters here whereas but from a top line point of view, it may appear that we're not getting the momentum that we are.

And again, you can count on us to bring the transparency to that not just this year, but as we go forward. And so 2021 is a challenging year from the tip of the iceberg, looking at our overall revenue versus the prior year.

But when you look at the underlying business, the go-forward business, the business that we're very excited to and that Ken talks about getting to $500 million in the next couple of years through a combination of organic and inorganic growth. We're still feeling pretty good about that..

Bryan Bergin

And then you called out here that, obviously, the pandemic has changed the company materially from one year ago.

Does this change the way you're thinking about medium-term growth and margin potential in the aggregate?.

Regina Paolillo

Yes. I mean, again, I made the comments, I'd really like to get through the year. Our fourth quarter bookings are very important to the next year. Understand where our backlog is, and a couple of other things and be able to give formal guidance. But I do think that for the next year or so, that 15% to 25% in Digital is right.

I'll get to the margins in the same. You'll note in the script, I said 5% to 7% on Engage, which is already different from the kind of 3% to 5% that we've been saying, and we'll be able to share more.

From a margin point of view, there's a, yes, we feel, we've always felt like getting in that, let's say, EBITDA of 14% to 16% was kind of midterm, meaning in the next 18 to kind of 24 months. We got there a lot sooner because of the volumes that we got to. And in that, there are some things that we have not been doing. We've been not traveling.

I would say while in Q2, we pulled back discretionary spend, we never, right? We never had any layoffs, right? We're going to always keep our headcount in line with our backlog and pipeline. But it wasn't like TTEC had any material level of exiting people at all.

And so what you're seeing in Q3 and Q4 are what I would say, normalized expenses with the exception of some travel. And as I said earlier, travel is about 1.5 points of our top line, and we're probably about 33 basis points of cost on revenue right now. So we will, over time, have to put that back in.

But we are not without our optimization of our corporate services, inclusive of IT.

And so we feel that we have, within a point or so of margin, very good opportunity to continue to see, into next year, profit margins at or about this level, before which, right, we make any decisions to further invest in additional sales and marketing go to market, right? So again, we'll pull these pieces out and share with you when in early next March, we give guidance.

But we're not thinking that we're hitting a 14% to 15% EBITDA this year, and we're going back to 12.5% to 13%, I promise you that..

Operator

Our last question is from Jason Kupferberg of Bank of America. Sir, you may begin..

Unidentified Analyst

This is Kathy on for Jason. Thanks for squeezing me guys. So I guess I wanted to shift back to talk a little bit about Engage. Obviously, based on your guidance, you expect it to remain pretty elevated in 4Q.

Just when do you expect it to slow in or potentially return to pre-COVID levels? And like what do you think is sort of the maybe medium-term sustainable growth rate and in the Engage piece? Thank you..

Regina Paolillo

Yeah. I mean, I guess --, go ahead, Ken, please..

Ken Tuchman Founder, Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

No, go ahead. I mean, I don't see it slowing. I think this is not about COVID anymore. But go ahead, Regina..

Regina Paolillo

Yes, I was just going to say the same thing. And then just to reiterate what I said earlier. If you look at our Q4 bookings, 92% of those bookings were a BAU bookings.

If you look at the agreements of the COVID work that we had previously and now, it's really the underlying nature of its unemployment work, its prepaid cards, it's fraud detection and prevention. Its contact tracing. These are now been signed up as longer-term contracts. So we always have churn, if you will, on our base, probably 8% to 12%.

And I would say of the $460 million of bookings that we have year-to-date, maybe $30 million are not going to -- are relative to the pandemic and are not going to continue.

But that's a small number in the grand scheme of things on our $1.6 billion Engage business, especially when you take into consideration that we're always planning in 8% to 12% churn of our existing revenue for a variety of reasons..

Unidentified Analyst

And you talked a little bit before about like the broad geographic reach you guys had. You guys are doing a little bit more work in looking at that a little closer.

I mean is there anything you can share about which geographies maybe you're trying to penetrate deeper in? Or are you pretty happy with your mix now?.

Regina Paolillo

Again, I'll just repeat what I I'll repeat what I said earlier, right? I mean we've got a huge presence in the US, North America. A couple of years ago, we started to see Europe. Europe is now really growing. And so we expect to go deeper there, make more investment there. And we do have a small team in Asia Pac and in Latin America.

But those would be ones that, depending on how the cards we play into next year, we could or could not accelerate. But really, our focus right now is to go long in Europe. We're having success. We're going to build on that success.

And when I say Europe, I'm really talking about client acquisition, although, obviously, we will provide delivery throughout Europe to make sure that we accommodate all the languages..

Paul Miller Head of Investor Relations, Senior Vice President & Treasurer

Operator, you may close the line. Thank you..

Operator

Thank you for participation. This concludes the TTEC's Third Quarter 2020 Earnings Conference Call. You may disconnect at this time. Thank you..

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