Good day, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Zscaler Third Quarter 2022 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. After the speakers' presentations, there will be question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded.
[Operator Instructions] I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Mr. Bill Choi, Senior Vice President of Investor Relations and Strategic Finance. Mr. Choi, the floor is yours..
Loop's Software Conference on June 1; Bank of America's Global Tech Conference on June 8; Mizuho Virtual Cybersecurity Summit on June 13; and we will also host an investor briefing focused on our latest innovations at the Zenith Live Conference on June 22. Now I'll turn the call over to Jay..
First, ZPA is the only cloud security service with FedRAMP High authorization for Zero Trust Remote Access. We connect users to applications and not to the network, eliminating lateral threat movement, a core principle of zero trust architecture that can’t be achieved by next gen firewalls or cloud VPNs.
Second, ZIA’s proxy architecture, which inspects TLS-encrypted traffic at scale delivering superior security. Our proven track record running the world’s largest inline security cloud makes Zscaler the obvious and trusted partner of choice for governments and enterprises.
We now have 288 customers exceeding $1 million in ARR, an increase of 77% year-over-year. We deliver a mission-critical service that requires unmatched reliability and availability for an in-line cloud. There is no compression algorithm for over 10 years of operational experience running such a cloud.
An example of our proven scale is that Zscaler processes over 240 billion transactions inline per day, which is more than 20x the number of Google searches per day. Now, let me share a few observations about our high net retention rates, which has exceeded 125% for the last 6 quarters.
We made a number of investments in customer success services, technical account managers, partner services, and certification of partners, which together are driving a faster and greater adoption across our broad portfolio. We have a solid blueprint for accelerating value delivery, which is driving upsells.
All of these investments result in happy customers, demonstrated by our Net Promoter Score or NPS of more than 70, which is more than 2x that of an average SaaS company. Next let me now highlight our rapid pace of innovation.
After having built the most comprehensive platform to provide Zero Trust for Users, we are now expanding it for Zero Trust for Workloads.
Unlike scores of vendors who offer point-products for cloud native apps, Zscaler has developed a fully integrated CSPM, CIEM and Infrastructure-as-Code Scanning with a common backend and fully correlated, actionable dashboard.
Gartner calls this functionality CNAPP, but we have moved beyond CNAPP by integrating the threat and data awareness from ZIA and ZPA. We will be highlighting it and other innovations at Zenith Live, our annual cloud summit next month.
We enhanced our AI/ML engine for ZDX, our fastest growing new service, to leverage billions of telemetry points from millions of users to improve digital user experience.
It can not only automatically figure out what and where performance issues are but can also provide information about the quality of voice, video and screen sharing due to our integration with Microsoft Teams and Zoom. We have also integrated ZDX with ServiceNow making customer end-user support far more efficient.
ZDX also got certified and became available on our Federal cloud. Our ThreatLabZ security research team is tracking over a dozen APT groups and getting better reconnaissance about their tools and behavioral patterns resulting in higher order threat intelligence.
This specific threat intel coupled with our massive cloud effect from 240 billion transactions and 300 trillion signals per day enables Zscaler to deliver better threat protection than other vendors. Moving beyond users and workloads, we are now bringing Zero Trust to IoT/OT systems, a large emerging opportunity.
Today, Siemens and Zscaler announced the availability of an integrated all-in-one solution to accelerate secure access to OT systems. Our joint development with Siemens brings the benefits of Zscaler to factory and industrial control systems. We are thrilled to have Siemens, a long-standing customer, as a development and go-to-market partner.
In closing, in spite of uncertain macro conditions, we continue to see strong demand for our services. We are in a strong financial position, and we will continue to aggressively invest in our business. We are focused on hiring and developing talent and creating a culture that rewards innovation at all levels.
We have grown our global organization to approximately 4,500 employees who are energized by our shared mission to secure the hyperconnected world of cloud and mobility. We grew our total sales and marketing headcount by 54% year-over-year, and we remain focused on investing in our go-to-market machine.
In today’s competitive hiring market, Zscaler is a destination for top talent. To drive continued growth in hiring and to build on Zscaler’s high-performing hybrid-work culture, this month, we welcomed Brendan Castle, Google’s former global head of talent acquisition, as our new Chief People Officer.
Brendan has proven experience in building highly motivated and productive teams at scale. With app transformation already mainstream, network and security transformation is also becoming mainstream, which we pioneered with our Zero Trust Exchange. We believe customers trust Zscaler more than any other provider for securing their cloud journey.
Recent uncertainty in the macro environment is driving customers to accelerate their network and security transformation with our integrated platform, resulting in reductions in cost, complexity and business risk. We are adding a record number of Global 2000 customers, now with 30% of Global 2000 and 40% of Fortune 500 customers trusting Zscaler.
These demanding customers are making large multi-year commitments to our platform. We are not just growing rapidly at any cost, we are also profitable and delivering efficient growth.
We will continue our disciplined investment in innovation and growth to capture the large and growing opportunity ahead of us Now I'd like to turn over the call to Remo for our financial results..
we increased by 37 customers in the quarter. The continued strength in this metric speaks to our large enterprise focus and the strategic role we play in our customers’ digital transformation initiatives. We added 140 customers in the quarter paying us more than $100,000 annually, ending the quarter at 1,891 such customers.
Turning to the rest of our Q3 financial performance, total gross margin of 80.6% was approximately flat quarter-over-quarter and year-over-year. Our total operating expenses increased 11% sequentially and 70% year-over-year to $204 million.
Operating expenses as a percentage of revenue was 71% compared to 68% in the year ago quarter, due to a partial return of T&E. Operating margin was 9% and free cash flow margin was 15%. We continue to expect data center CapEx to be around high-single digit percent of revenue for the full year.
We ended the quarter with over $1.66 billion in cash, cash equivalents, and short-term investments. Now, moving on to guidance and modeling points. As a reminder, these numbers are all non-GAAP which excludes stock-based compensation expenses and related payroll taxes, amortization of debt discount and amortization of intangible assets.
We are once again increasing our guidance across all metrics. For the fourth quarter of fiscal 2022, we expect revenue in the range of $304 million to $306 million, reflecting a year-over-year growth of 54% to 55%; gross margins of 79%.
I would like to remind investors that a number of our emerging products, including ZDX, Workload Segmentation and CSPM, will initially have lower gross margins than our core products, because we are more focused on time-to-market and growth rather than optimizing them for gross margins; operating profit in the range of $33 million to $34 million.
We have more in-person events this quarter, including customer events, Zenith Live and RSA conferences; net loss on other income of $500,000; income taxes of $3 million; earnings per share of $0.20 to $0.21, assuming approximately 146 million to 147 million fully diluted shares.
For the full-year fiscal 2022 we are increasing our revenue guidance to approximately $1.078 billion or year-over-year growth of 60%, increasing calculated billings to a range of $1.425 billion to $1.430 billion or year-over-year growth of approximately 53%, increasing our operating profit to a range of $106 million to $108 million, increasing our earnings per share to a range of $0.64 to $0.65 assuming approximately 147 million to 148 million fully diluted shares; free cash flow of $215 million, reflecting free cash flow margin of approximately 20% for the full year.
With a revenue growth outlook of 60% and free cash flow margin of 20%, we expect to operate at the Rule-of-80 for the full year. With customers increasingly adopting the broader platform with longer-term commitments, we plan to invest in capturing our large market opportunity.
We have confidence in the durability of our business model, with very high contribution margins after the initial land and proven ability to retain and upsell to our enterprise customer base.
We will balance growth and profitability based on how our business is growing, but we will continue to prioritize growth which we believe is in the best interest of our shareholders, employees, and customers. Operator, you may now open the call for questions..
[Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from Andrew Nowinski of Wells Fargo..
Congrats on another amazing quarter. I wanted to ask about your federal demand. Jay, I think you said you saw you're seeing considerable momentum in the U.S. Federal this quarter or this -- which seems to be an uptick from Q2, where I think it was maybe one of the underperforming sectors.
So just wondering if you could comment on maybe what changed and what caused that uptick in demand this quarter ahead of the usual budget flush in calendar Q3?.
Andrew, I'll start it last quarter, Q2, our federal was low single digit of new and upsell. And in Q3, it was mid-single digit, so definitely an uptick. Also, on a go-forward basis, we do see federal as being an important contributor to Zscaler. We feel that we're well positioned in the federal market. I'll let Jay speak more to that..
Yes. Andrew, as you know, President's executive order is to implement Zero Trust architecture, and it's well aligned it actually aligns with what we have done. To be success in federal, you need 2 things. One, you need the right architecture, Zero Trust, which we have. Two, unique FedRAMP certifications. And we have the highest FedRAMP certifications.
And now there's a timing issue as well. White House issued a memo setting a timeline for agencies to achieve Zero Trust architecture within 2 years. These plans are being submitted and more budgets are becoming available. All of this is positive long-term development from our point of view. However, Fed opportunities always save time..
Our next question comes from Alex Henderson of Needham..
Great. I've been listening to a lot of people trying to get into this Zero Trust market. And 1 of the things that really strikes me is highly differentiated is, one, the policy implementation mechanics are so radically different than what you're doing versus the traditional perimeter defense.
And then second is the sharp increase in attacks that we're seeing in terms of encrypted traffic, received the report today talking about over a 300% increase in encrypted attacks over the last year.
Can you talk to the relevance of those 2 data points or those 2 concepts relative to your platform? And how you solve that better than, say, alternative vendors? And in that context, can you just address Cloudflare's comments that they're getting more aggressive in this space?.
Yes, thank you, Alex. So first of all, Zero Trust implementation. People sometimes build a little VPN replacement they call it Zero Trust. What we built with Zscaler Private Access is a platform that replaces the entire inbound D&C. Literally, you need nothing between Zscaler and the workload and application running.
And in fact, on top of that, we further expanded to a browser isolation, app protection, interior deception and EIM based policy that can help you do segmentation. It's because of that you're winning ZPA deals a big time. So that's 1 part. The second part was attacks. So first of all, for someone to attack, they need to find you.
With our Zero Trust architecture, your applications hind behind Zscaler, they can’t even find. And the next part of attacks is -- and this is impacted attacks. For that, you need a proper proxy architecture that actually terminate connection, look at the package and everything, decrypt them, find them and take care of them.
For that, we have built a very, very highly scalable architecture that sets us apart, that scales like nothing else out there. So it's a combination of these things. With 10-plus years of experience running a massive in-line cloud is what sets us apart from others.
Now regarding some of the competitors coming from CDN market are DDoS or DNS market, right, those guys generally have been focused on servers. We start focusing on users to start with. It takes a lot of time and experience to build our richness and breadth of functionality we have built with ZIA, ZPA and associated functionality.
I think it will take a long, long time for someone to try to catch us. And we are setting. We are innovating at a very fast pace..
Next, we have Hasma Fodderwala of Morgan Stanley..
Just one question for Remo. I'm wondering if you can give us a little bit more color on how you're thinking about the margin trajectory going forward? It seems like you want to continue hiring against the market opportunity that you're seeing. Zscaler has obviously been more of a destination for talent in the last couple of years.
And particularly the incentive structure around the stock, a lot of employees have done well.
How are you thinking about that incentive structure between cash and stock going forward, given that we're probably going to be in a more difficult equity market in general and just the pace of hiring relative to what you've done in the last couple of years?.
There are a lot of questions Yes. Yes. Let me see if I can go through and just kind of give you my view and maybe Jay can tell that also. We -- currently, we're at the Rule-of-80. That's what we're projecting for this year. And the way we define the Rule-of-80 is our revenue growth and also free cash flow margin.
Our free cash flow margin this year, we're projecting to be 20%. It was 20% last year. So we're in a unique position to really take advantage of this market opportunity because we've got significant cash flow coming into the company as well as we're in the early stages of this market. So we're going to continue to make investments as we go forward.
Those investments are going to be across the board throughout the organization, and we're going to -- and our goal is to get to a $5 billion ARR company. So we're building the infrastructure in place to do that.
And related to employees and incentives with the stock options and just cash incentives, the cash incentives that we talked about on the last call related to the frothy environment, last quarter with a lot of start-up companies and companies or PE-backed companies having really big packages.
So we adjusted our merit to reflect to get our employees at market levels. So from a cash compensation perspective, we're in pretty good shape. Regarding stock. Stock, all companies basically have decreased stock prices and -- what we're doing is we're taking a look at that.
No decisions made at this point regarding what we're going to do from a stock perspective. But what I can say is our stock-based compensation as we go forward, will decrease as a percentage of revenue. What happens is that when you get to a certain scale as a company and a very large company, their stock-based compensation becomes -- goes down.
We'll follow the same path as the large companies, you'll see our stock base coming down over a period of time. Regarding the pace of hiring, -- and again, we're seeing all the things that you're seeing related to the global macro environment. We're not seeing it. From our perspective, we are strategic for our customers.
As Jay talked about, our deal sizes are getting large. Our strategic nature and our engagement with our customers is increasing. So our plan is to continue the pace of hiring. And if we can increase the pace of hiring, we will. Now regarding color to -- related to operating profitability and also growth.
We'll put growth because, number one, we are mindful. Jay and I are mindful of operating profitability in world school, quite frankly, we look at the bottom line. So we see -- we see a huge market opportunity, huge we feel we're the leader in that market.
We will continue to invest, and we'll do it on a prudent basis that we feel is the best interest of our shareholders and our employees..
If I may add 2 quick comments to what Remo said, with very high gross margins and unit economics, it becomes easier for us to invest in businesses. Secondly, the hiring environment has -- is actually getting easier.
We are hearing of high-flying companies that raise funding and multibillion-dollar valuations last year, they're starting to lay off people or freeze hiring, and companies that are spending to grow at any cost are now starting to slow down.
So we will keep on accelerating our plan because our customers want to leverage Zscaler, to accelerate their transformation because they want to be competitive NHI..
And next, we have Matt Hedberg of RBC Capital Markets..
Congrats. Jay, what really stood out to me was the success in large deals and multiproduct sales. I think especially impressive given the partner momentum in some of these large deals. Can you talk about the importance of hyperscalers? I believe you called out on an 8-figure deal.
Is there more -- is there even more that you guys can do to drive even faster partner contribution? Because it really does feel like that flywheel is really kicking in well?.
Yes. So the partner momentum comes from 2 sides. One is partners like Microsoft, who have been helping us even without fulfilling through marketplace. That momentum has been leveraged for the last several years. Now it has extended over AWS quite a bit. So that's 1 area. The second area is being able to deliver orders through cloud marketplace.
It is 1 more channel for us to revenue. Our business through both AWS and Azure has been steadily growing, and these current viewed as a part of a clone transformation solution. So when it's focal through a marketplace channel, it often comes out of an annual cloud spend that's already committed by the customer with a hyperscaler.
So that makes it actually easier in many ways. In Q3, with 1 of our largest deals through AWS marketplace. And if you recall, we did a very large deal last quarter through Azure Marketplace, and we are training AWS and Microsoft sales teams. And I think there's a good opportunity to create more leverage. And these are generally larger deals.
So you've seen our momentum in larger deals in the last 2 quarters, we have added almost 80 Global 2000 companies to our portfolio. I mean that's pretty remarkable, and we don't see any slowdown..
Next, we have Patrick Colville of Deutsche Bank..
Thank you so much for having me on and echo everyone else's congratulations on a very impressive set of numbers. My question is on the billings guide, which to me was probably the standout metric of the quarter. So I think above probably where many investors were expecting, so very healthy there.
Can you just talk to what you guys are seeing in the pipes for fiscal fourth quarter and the health that I guess you underline the confidence to give that strong billings guidance for the fiscal year..
Yes. I'll start it. And Jay, if you'd like to contribute anything. We have a strong pipeline. As we talked about, we're becoming more strategic. Our deal sizes are getting bigger. We review our pipeline with our sales organization. And based on our projections, we did give a strong guide, Patrick, which is basically up 6%, basically guide up.
The key thing is that with the world that's changed with in this way for a while with applications in the cloud and users removal and workloads both in the cloud and on-prem and other locations, platform Zscaler created really addresses this market head on. Also, the efficiency that we create for customers at a very attractive ROI.
It's really what stands out. And so we're seeing with large customers that adopting more of the platform, as Jay has talked about, we're seeing that. So it is basically a review of the pipeline and review what we feel we're comfortable to guide to..
Yes. So I think what Remo said, our projections always take into account our pipeline, our customer engagements. But at a qualitative level, as I talked to lots and lots of CIOs and CSOs, I mean there is a sense of uncertainty out there. And they're beginning to think about how do I do my cost and complexity reduction by consolidation.
And that's where we start becoming pretty important. And for that, customers are driving transformation. We help them with it. On top of that cyber is a big issue.
So when you bring all these things together, we become more important for them, and they start a discussion with, Jay, what all security products and networking products can I replace with you? And now, we are able to actually talk about a bigger set of products that need to be removed, which actually leads to a bigger part of platform to be bought.
Now on top of that, it's interesting to see certainly on the high-flying private start-up companies, which would talk about all kinds of different hiring, how many employees, all that stuff is getting tempered down. That means the unnecessary noise in the market, it's expected to slow down.
And it's fascinating to see people calling us from those start-ups already. So we are bullish about the business..
Next, we have Joel Fishbein of Truist..
I'll echo the congrats on the great execution this quarter. Jay, I just want to ask about workload segmentation. It sounds like your -- I know it's early days. You're very excited about it and have some good uptake. I'm really interested in go-to-market around workload segmentation and actually IoT and OT.
It doesn't seem like they're natural -- they have different buying centers inside of organizations than ZIA, ZPA and ZDX. Love to hear how you're going to plan to go to market there and increase deal sizes around those specific areas..
Very good question. In Q2, we talked about how a number of our large customers are beginning to buy Workloads, our Zero Trust of Workloads, but at a small scale. This last quarter, we start to see them actually buying some very large orders in this area. So that's very encouraging now.
In terms of the buyer and the products, the Cloud Protection products can be put in 2 broad buckets. One, what Gartner now called CNAPP is a collection of CSPM, CI and type of stuff. It's API-based security. It's a new area for everyone. It's a simple to build, and we have a very good offering in that space.
We revamped our CNAPP offering, which we'll be launching at Zenith Live next month. And parallel with that is Zero Trust workload, which is taking ZIA and ZPA technology and making it available for workloads because at flows need to talk to Internet that goes through ZIA engine. They need to talk to each other, which goes to ZPA engine.
This is bringing Zero Trust to workloads. Bringing the 2 together, in-line piece of it and API piece of it sets us apart from any other vendor in the market out there. Regarding buying centers, if you really look at it, if we were selling at a lower level, buying will be very different.
No matter what -- who buys the product, when it comes to security part, CSO is definitely involved. So our good relationship CSO are helping us with Zero Trust, with Workload and Cloud Protection.
Our relationship with Head of Networking are helping us because in the old world, you are extending your data center to cloud with all these dedicated links out there. The area we are developing and building more relationship is the DevOps side of it. But since CSO relations are strong, it is helping us.
We are not creating an overlay team, but we do have product specialist. You need overlay teams when you're selling point products at low level. When we have been selling platform at a high level, I don't need overlay teams. I do need product specialists, which we are hiring to work with our broad sales team.
Did that help?.
And next, we have Fatima Boolani of Citi..
Remo, this one is for you. In Jay's script, a lot of anecdotes around the multi-land transactions in the 8-figure deal momentum in the $1 million customer momentum. So what I wanted to ask you was just from a booking standpoint, I think you've called out that you are seeing a bigger multi-year commitments from some of your customers.
So we're certainly not seeing that impact on billings in terms of your invoicing duration.
But I'm curious if you can comment or share any sort of observations on your backlog? And if there's any duration impact in there that we should be thinking about more critically?.
Yes. That's a great question. If you take a look at our RPO and CRPO growth on a year-over-year basis. Those are committed deals. Our RPO growth was 83% and our CRPO growth was 75%. Related to duration, the duration was comparable on a year-over-year basis. There's no headwinds. We expect duration to be in that 10 to 14 months range.
So I mean, the key things from billings. Billings is calculated billings, which is calculated off of deferred revenue. So that's what we actually build. But we look at the RPO and CRPO growth rates, RPO is 83% and CRPO at 75% growth rate on a year-over-year basis.
Now having said that, even though those metrics are outstanding, we still feel that billings is the best measure for Zscaler because we found that duration period from 10 to 14 months. That's -- so I hope that answers your question. I believe that answers your question.
But the actual commitment that customers are making to Zscaler is quite impressive..
And Remo, if I may add one thing. This is an outstanding quarter from lots of customers doing multi-product pillar deals for multi-years, which is very exciting..
Next question comes from Ben Bollin of Cleveland Research..
Good afternoon, I wanted to go back to the topic around cloud marketplaces.
Remo, can you quantify how much of the business is being transacted over cloud marketplaces today or how that has evolved? And then also interested in any way we should think about the margin implications of that business versus other sales channels?.
Yes. I mean not much business currently going through cloud new marketplace. There is business going through, but we see that as a very important channel for us. And related to margin, we expect good margins through a flat marketplace.
Jay, if you want to?.
Yes. But one thing that business through cloud marketplaces has been steadily growing over time. So that is very good. For us, I don't think the driver is what's the fulfillment channel for us. I personally care about partners who actually helped me with strategic sales to the customer.
When Microsoft accounting cancer able to sit together with the CIO and talk through a large deal. It is extremely useful. But it does help to get cloud hyperscaler sales team more engaged because they actually do compensate it for the business that flows through the channel part -- through cloud marketplace.
So we actually are putting more focus on training AWS and Microsoft sales team, so which helps them and helps us..
And next, we have Tal Liani of Bank of America..
I have 2 questions. One, in general, but I'm trying -- I get this question along from investors. I'm trying to understand economic slowdown, what's the impact on your business? It's a little bit of a philosophical question, but it's a question we're being asked a lot, and I would like to hear your view on this topic.
And second, we are at times of focus on cash flow and margins. And I look at your operating margin in the last 4 quarters, -- it went down from 13% to 8.7% in the previous quarter, this quarter slightly recovered. And at the same time, your revenues went up by 50%, give or take. So we don't see much leverage on the margin.
And the question is if I pass forward 2 to 3 years, if I think about margin leverage and what needs to happen for you to have serious margin upside.
Can you talk about the pros and cons of your operating margin?.
I'll start with that. We absolutely do have leverage in the model. In a SaaS model with 80% gross margin, growing at the scale that we're growing we absolutely have no leverage.
What we talked about is that with this large market opportunity, it would be a disservice to our shareholders and our employees if we try to drive top line operating profitability at this stage. Having said that, when you take a look at our free cash flow margin, last year, it was around 20% or over 20%.
And we're projecting free cash flow margin this year at 20%.
So when you have that kind of free cash flow margin at the scale that we are, making the investments that we're making in the position that we are as a company in this very large market, there's no better use of our cash for our resources than investing in the business and really executing and trying to drive our top line growth.
Having said that, we will be mindful, we will be mindful. If we wanted to drive operating profitability, it doesn't take much. But with our free cash flow margin where it is, we're very, very comfortable. Now from an economic slowdown perspective, Security is important.
Companies basically are knocking out the attacks are going to keep coming, and they're probably going to increase. Also, companies going through this downturn have to find areas to save money. We are efficient. Our ROI is absolutely outstanding. It is significant ROI with the highest level of security down to the deepest level.
And so from an economic slowdown perspective, we are not seeing it currently. Now can that change? It can. But right now, based on our pipeline, based on what we're seeing, and what we talked about, we're going to continue to hire at pace. Jay and I, as I mentioned before, have a lot of experience.
We've been -- we've seen the 3 downturns -- 3 or 4 downturns actually in our lifetime, our careers. Zscaler is different and we feel we're in a great position. We will take things into account all things but -- and driving operating profitability at this stage, it's really -- we will increase operating profitability as we go.
But we're going to be also trying to drive that top line growth.
Jay?.
Yes. Two quick comments. First of all, I do believe there's uncertainties helping us because we are going to help customers with cost reduction and complexity reduction. And on the other side, our flagship CIC products, they have reached significant scale and are generating good margins. But we are reinvesting that to drive the growth of new products.
We have proven that when we brought ZPA on, we made it successful. We've seen -- we brought ZDX on. We're making it successful. It's growing even faster than ZPA did, and we have high expectations from Workload Protection as well. So I think with such a large platform, we expect that we'll keep on growing fairly efficiently..
Our next question comes from Roger Boyd of UBS Securities..
Congrats on the results. Just a quick question on SD-WAN. Historically, you've had some success tied to adoption there. I know Zscaler agnostic to how customers ultimately onboard to the Zero Trust Exchange. But with some of the SD-WAN vendors facing some disruption in share losses and potential change of ownership.
How do you think about those changes in terms of potential opportunities or risks?.
Yes. Before COVID came in, Zscaler used to start with, let's do network transformation. When COVID started 2.5 years ago, SD-WAN went out the door, there's nobody working in the branch offices and customers start to roll out Zscaler by downloading a lightweight agent and here it goes.
So with that, the role of any network or SD-WAN became really insignificant. Today, most of our customers roll it out or lapped our mobile with a lightweight agent they can work from home, they can work from office with SD-WAN, without SD-WAN. So we'll stay neutral to supporting SD-WAN vendors. Our sales processes are no longer led by SD-WAN.
If a customer sales on rolling on SD-WAN, we are generally the preferred choice, and that's how we see it. So we don't really see any changes in the SD-WAN marketplace impacting us..
Our next question comes from Joshua Tilton of Wolfe Research..
I don't believe you mentioned it in the prepared remarks, but can you talk about any impact to the business you're seeing either positive or negative from the Russia Ukraine prices?.
Yes. Russia, Ukraine. It was a bigger thing a quarter ago. I decided years ago not to sell in Russia. Hence, we do not have any revenue exposure in Russia or Ukraine, but cybersecurity is a global threat.
It's not a regional at -- our threat research team is tracking heightened cyber cat environment, which is making every CIO and CSO more nervous in this area. So this is driving the adoption of Zero Trust architecture and it is increasing our engagement with customers.
More so in Europe, actually European customers are more worried about it, while Americans are, too. So we have some very large deals in Europe this quarter, including a couple of them I highlighted. We don't really see any negative impact of this conflict and we remain engaged with our customers to drive the transformation.
They want to become agile, competitive, play a role there and then cyber on top of that. So I don't see any negative impact..
The next question shall come from Rob Owens of Piper Sandler..
I wonder if you guys could drill into the Siemens partnership a little bit.
And I guess, Jay, more broadly, what you see as the opportunity in OT from where you sit?.
OT plants and factories have been slow in changing typically plans take their own time, but all these critical infrastructure attacks and some threats have made it a priority. Vendors like Sims are big providers of 4P systems out there.
They see this as an opportunity for really providing or should I say, taking fiber and VPN based security of OT systems to zero trust-based security, where you no longer connect these OT networks and IT networks where you no longer need remote VPN to access the systems. So Siemens has worked with us over the last year or so.
They essentially chose us as a partner, we did joint development where we made our technology available on their hardened OT systems, and this combined solution of Siemens and ours is now available through our customers' office. I think it's a good opportunity for us.
I think it's a matter of time when all IoT OT systems will embrace Zero Trust, and we are positioned well for that opportunity..
And this concludes today's Q&A session. I would turn the conference back over to your CEO, Jay Chaudhry, for closing remarks..
Thank you. I want to thank you all for your continued interest in Zscaler. I also want to thank Zscaler employees, customers and partners for delivering a strong quarter. We look forward to seeing many of you at Zenith Live, our annual cloud summit. Thank you..
This concludes today's conference call. Thank you all for participating. You may now disconnect, and have a pleasant day..