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Earnings call: Talkspace sees growth with military contract and Medicare plans

EditorAhmed Abdulazez Abdulkadir
Published 2024-08-07, 09:22 a/m
© Reuters.
TALK
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Talkspace Inc. (TALK), a leading provider of online therapy services, reported a 29% increase in revenue to $46.1 million for the second quarter of 2024, with adjusted EBITDA reaching $1.2 million, marking its second consecutive profitable quarter. The company's growth was primarily driven by a 62% increase in payer revenue, expansion of covered lives to 145 million, and a new partnership with Humana (NYSE:HUM) Military to service 6 million active military lives through TRICARE.

Additionally, the Direct-to-Enterprise segment saw a 20% year-over-year increase, amounting to $9.6 million. Ian Harris joined as CFO and John Mooney as Chief Product Officer, bringing new leadership to the team. Talkspace reconfirmed its 2024 full-year revenue guidance, expecting between $185 million and $195 million, and adjusted EBITDA between $4 million and $8 million.

Key Takeaways

  • Talkspace's Q2 revenue rose by 29% to $46.1 million, with a 62% increase in payer revenue.
  • The company achieved a profitable quarter with $1.2 million in adjusted EBITDA.
  • A partnership with Humana Military will extend services to 6 million active military lives.
  • Direct-to-Enterprise revenue grew by 20% to $9.6 million, driven by initiatives like the New York City team space program.
  • Talkspace aims to expand Medicare coverage to all 50 states by year-end.
  • Over 5,700 therapists are now on the platform, a 34% increase from the previous year.
  • Two new senior executives were added to the team in Q2.
  • The company maintains a positive outlook for its payer business and enterprise market opportunities.

Company Outlook

  • Talkspace projects full-year 2024 revenue between $185 million and $195 million.
  • Adjusted EBITDA is anticipated to be between $4 million and $8 million.
  • The company is optimistic about expanding mental health access across all demographics.

Bearish Highlights

  • Consumer revenue declined by 28% year-over-year to $6.5 million.
  • The company faces challenges in going in-network with payers and ensuring quality control.

Bullish Highlights

  • The TRICARE East contract with Humana Military could add $12-14 million in annual value.
  • Strong demand for mental health services in the military and defense sector.
  • Increased interest from employers, especially in the mid to lower level employee firms.

Misses

  • Despite overall growth, there was a notable decline in consumer revenue.

Q&A Highlights

  • Executives discussed the Medicare rollout, expecting it to occur during open enrollment.
  • Marketing spend will not see a massive spike but will focus on efficient channels to reach beneficiaries.
  • The DTE business is expected to grow in the high teens or better annually from 2023 to 2024.

Talkspace's recent earnings call underscored the company's continued growth and strategic expansion in the mental health care market. With the addition of new senior executives and a significant partnership with Humana Military, the company is well-positioned to capitalize on the increasing demand for mental health services across various sectors, including the military and defense. Despite a drop in consumer revenue, Talkspace's comprehensive approach to mental health care and its focus on the payer and enterprise sectors suggest a promising trajectory for the remainder of the year.

InvestingPro Insights

Talkspace Inc. (TALK) has shown a commendable revenue growth in its latest quarterly report, with a promising outlook for the remainder of 2024. However, an analysis of the company's financial health and market performance reveals some additional considerations for investors:

InvestingPro Data indicates that Talkspace holds a market capitalization of $295.25M, reflecting its current valuation in the market. Despite the positive revenue growth, the company's P/E ratio stands at -38.83, and when adjusted for the last twelve months as of Q1 2024, it's at -24.83, which suggests that the market is pricing the company's earnings negatively, likely due to the lack of profitability. The revenue growth for the last twelve months as of Q1 2024 is impressive at 32.07%, showing that the company is expanding its top-line figures at a robust rate.

An InvestingPro Tip worth noting is that Talkspace has more cash than debt on its balance sheet, which is a sign of financial stability and may provide some cushion against market volatility or unexpected expenses. This is particularly relevant for a company in the growth phase, as it indicates a level of prudent financial management.

Moreover, the stock has taken a significant hit over the last week, with a 13.43% decline in price total return, which could be an indicator of market sentiment or reaction to recent company developments. This aligns with the InvestingPro Tip that the stock has fared poorly over the last month, shedding light on a potential area of concern for investors.

For those interested in deeper analysis, there are additional InvestingPro Tips available on the platform. For instance, there are insights on whether analysts expect the company to turn profitable this year, which is a crucial factor for long-term investment decisions. In total, there are 7 InvestingPro Tips listed for Talkspace, which can provide a more comprehensive understanding of the company's prospects and challenges.

To explore these insights further, investors can visit the dedicated page for Talkspace on InvestingPro: https://www.investing.com/pro/TALK.

Full transcript - Talkspace Inc (TALK) Q2 2024:

Operator: Thank you for standing by. My name is Kathleen and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Talkspace Second Quarter 2024 Earnings Conference Call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speakers’ remarks, there will be a question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] Thank you. I would like to turn the call over to Jeannine Feyen, Director of Communications. Please go ahead.

Jeannine Feyen: Good morning, and welcome to Talkspace’s earnings conference call for the second quarter of 2024. I hope you’ve had the opportunity to access the press release we posted on Talkspace’s IR website and the presentation of our earnings results. We’ll use the presentation to walk you through today’s remarks. Leading today’s call are our CEO, Dr. Jon Cohen; and our CFO, Ian Harris. Management will offer their prepared remarks, and we’ll then take your questions. Certain measures we’ll discuss on this call are expressed on a non-GAAP basis and have been adjusted to exclude the impact of one-off items. Reconciliations of these non-GAAP measures are included in our earnings release and on our website, talkspace.com. I also want to remind you that we will be discussing forward-looking information today, which may include forecasts, targets and other statements regarding our plans, goals, and strategic priorities and anticipated financial results. While these statements represent our best current judgment about future results and performance as of today, our actual results are subject to many risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from what we expect. Important factors that may affect our future results are described in our most recent SEC reports and today’s earnings press release. For more information, please review our safe harbor disclaimer on Slide 2. Now I will turn it over to Dr. Jon Cohen.

Jon Cohen: Thanks, Jeannine. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us for our second quarter 2024 call. We are pleased to report that Talkspace has achieved another strong quarter of results, reflecting continued execution across the business. Before I get into the results, I want to reiterate some of the data we recently released on the new normalization survey we reported on last week. This survey of over 3,000 current, former, and prospective clients of telehealth mental health services found that 85% of people are more open to therapy than they were five years ago. Gen Z and 65 year olds and older respondents cite loneliness as a top concern for seeking therapy. 99% believe that it should be covered by insurance and that mental health is the number one benefit they want from their employer. This data confirms and supports our continued optimism about the future of the business. Now turning to results. During the quarter, revenue increased 29% year-over-year to $46.1 million and we delivered our second consecutive profitable quarter with adjusted EBITDA coming in at $1.2 million. Strong year-over-year top line growth reflects both the significant demand for behavioral healthcare as well as the power of the Talkspace brand and our ability to drive new members to use the Talkspace platform. Our continued cost discipline and the benefits of scale are highlighting the operating leverage inherent in the business, which is reflected in our adjusted EBITDA progress. Let me cover our results in the second quarter by revenue category. First, our payer revenue grew 62% year-over-year, thanks to our strategic relationships with the payers. This annual growth is a result of several factors. First, our continued expansion of covered lives, which grew from 131 million to 145 million by quarter end. This was the result of adding the first batch of nearly 14 million people with standard Medicare coverage in 12 states. Talkspace launched a dedicated Medicare website where members can quickly check their coverage or get on the list to be notified when care becomes available in their state. We are on track towards our goal of having all 50 states live with Medicare coverage by the year-end, in addition to adding several large Medicare Advantage plans, the first of which will launch in Q4. Relative to new payer contracts, we just announced yesterday that we went live with 6 million active military lives through TRICARE with Humana Military, including active duty and retired military personnel, as well as their partners and 13 year olds and up dependents. Looking forward, we anticipate adding several new Blues plans and regional plans by the year-end. We expect that within the next 12 months, nearly 200 million people, almost two-thirds of the American public will have access to Talkspace through their health insurance. Second, understanding that our biggest opportunity for growth remains increasing capture rate and utilization for the 145 million and growing lives I just discussed. We continue to focus on our product improvement initiatives to motivate members to use and stay engaged on the platform. We are focused on enhancing the patient journey by making improvements to the intake process, therapist matching and more. Some specific examples include the ability to show real-time member co-pays, making it easier for people to update to their behavioral health coverage, and developing new navigation features in the therapy room to make it easier to book a next session. Third, optimizing our focused marketing efforts, specifically designated to improve capture rates and drive utilization by ensuring that people are aware that care is available through their insurance benefits. The average out-of-pocket cost for those in-network is $15 per session, 60% of members pay $0 and 80% pay $25 or less. Fourth, our strong payer results were also driven by further developing our relationships to bring referrals to Talkspace. In Q2, we announced a number of strategic partnerships, like our previously announced Women's Health Coalition, that further strengthened Talkspace's brand reach and recognition, which in turn enables us to acquire members cost effectively. We will continue to announce new partnerships to build this network and drive even stronger awareness of Talkspace as an affordable option. In fact, based on Qualtrics third-party survey data, the brand awareness of Talkspace increased this quarter to over 30%, a 7% increase versus a year ago despite less core member media spend, partly as a result of this strategy. It is important to note that a significant differentiator for us in the market is our focus on the quality of care a therapist deliver. Compared to a directory or marketplace of providers, we measure the quality of service, the clinical impact, productivity, clinical experience and clinical documentation for each provider. We find that this value proposition is resonating with payers as they are less concerned with just securing access to care and more interested in the quality of care. In addition, the infrastructure we have built around the clinical network gives us the opportunity to participate in value-based contracts, the obvious direction for most payer provider relationships moving forward. Moving to our Direct-to-Enterprise segment, we grew revenue in the quarter 20% year-over-year to $9.6 million, driven by our team's initiatives, including New York City. In May, we announced the early successful results of the New York City team space program, which now has over 13,000 teams using the service. These results demonstrate that we are reaching teens where they are on their phones with 90% using asynchronous messaging therapy. We are also engaging teams that live in diverse and underserved communities that have traditionally been difficult to reach and frequently have less access to affordable care. Finally, we are particularly proud that our therapists, in conjunction with our suicide ideation algorithm, have now identified and intervened in over 180 high risk student cases. We are continuing to invest in new product features for this population based on feedback we have received from teens, parents and customers to-date. We continue to see a strong pipeline in this segment, driven by our continued focus on the mental health crisis impacting on our youth, and we are encouraged by the demand we see for our keen solutions across multiple states, cities and school districts. We have had recent notable wins with several independent schools as well as another public school district in Upstate New York. In the employer vertical, we executed a number of key renewals in the quarter, secured several new client wins, and began testing our new self-serve portal where small business clients can make Talkspace benefits available to their employees. Our discussions with employer clients have been encouraging and we expect to share more exciting additions as the year progresses. In addition, we have made significant progress with the broker community, successfully demonstrating our value proposition as it relates to their end clients. Our sales team remains focused on converting our strong pipeline of employer opportunities. Our new wins in the quarter demonstrate the diversity of our pipeline and the team’s ability to drive wins across various business types and geographies. Moving to our provider network, we ended the quarter with over 5,700 therapists, up 2% sequentially and 34% year-over-year. We have intentionally slowed the growth of our network in recent quarters, which reflects the success of our initiatives to improve therapist efficiency, while at the same time improving our metrics around the patient’s time to access care, all against the backdrop of growing patient demand. Talkspace continues to be a platform of choice for therapists, which is a result of the investments we have made in our provider experience and our overall product quality. For example, our AI innovation group will bring to market product features in close partnership with our clinical team, including our new secure caption and translation technology, which allows Talkspace providers and clients to choose to see real-time closed captions during live sessions conducted on our app. At the request of our providers, we have also expanded our AI smart notes feature, which helps to reduce the administrative burden of providers and allows us to focus more time on providing care. AI smart notes is now live with all providers for both live and texting sessions. In the quarter, our full time therapists were the most productive in Talkspace’s history, relative to the number of billable hours per week, thanks in part to the investments we made in efficiency tools like the AI smart notes. In closing, I want to reiterate our unique position in the marketplace, reflected in our sustained momentum over the last six quarters. Our comprehensive service offerings and modalities are built to serve all demographics from teen to seniors. Enhanced by innovation, we believe our capabilities continue to set industry standards validated time and again through our peer reviewed research. In July, the Psychiatric Services journal published the results of a trial delivering 12 weeks of asynchronous therapy to Talkspace members with diagnosed depression. Results of this trial, which was funded by the National Institutes of Mental Health, suggests, and I quote, “Psychotherapy delivered via text messages may be a viable alternative to face to face for live video delivery and allow for more immediate on demand care.” This quarter’s results underscore our commitment to our mission of expanding mental health access to all. Lastly, I want to extend a warm welcome to two new senior executives who joined Talkspace in the second quarter. Ian Harris joined as our Chief Financial Officer in May. He was previously a Partner at Hudson (NYSE:HUD) Executive Capital, where he led the firm’s investments in healthcare, technology and fintech. And John Mooney joined Talkspace as Chief Product Officer in June, following senior leadership positions at Neogenomics Laboratories, BioReference Health, and CareEvolve. With that, I’ll turn the call over to Ian to review our second quarter results.

Ian Harris: Thank you Jon, and good morning everyone. First, let me say what an honor it is to join this incredible group of people at the preeminent virtual mental health platform. I’m looking forward to helping execute on the strategic mission of the business, making access to high quality therapy more affordable and accessible for everyone through in network and employer sponsored coverage. With 10 weeks of CFO under my belt, it’s clear to me that Talkspace has the resources, human capital and the culture of innovation, as well as the operational rigor to continue to lead the digital mental health industry. As Talkspace enters a new phase of profitable growth with a robust set of opportunities ahead of us, I’m excited to work closely with the leadership team to help execute on the strategic direction of the business by optimizing resource allocation to drive long-term benefits for the company, and to also clearly articulate our strategy to all of our stakeholders. So let me start with our financials. My comments today will be based primarily on second quarter results on a year-on-year basis, unless otherwise noted. Total revenue for the second quarter was $46.1 million, a 29% increase from a year ago. Adjusted EBITDA was approximately $1.2 million in the second quarter, an improvement of $5.2 million versus the prior year period and marks our second consecutive quarter of profitability. Moving to results by revenue categories. Payer revenue was $29.9 million, a 62% increase versus the prior year period. Payer sessions completed by behavioral health and EAP members grew 5% sequentially and 49% year-over-year to nearly 299,000. Unique payer members completing a session grew by over 30% year-on-year to 89,000. Additionally, we experienced a 15% year-on-year improvement in the utilization of sessions per active member, driven by continued product enhancements aimed at increasing member engagement and retention. In the direct-to-enterprise category, second quarter revenue was $9.6 million, up 20% from last year, driven by our teams contracts such as New York City and Baltimore County schools. Sequentially, DTE revenue was down 3% as a result of the timing of new contract wins we discussed last quarter. As a reminder, our pipeline remains robust, but selling cycle times for new wins, especially in the team space, have remained elongated. In the consumer category where members pay out of pocket revenue is $6.5 million in the quarter. This was a 7% sequential decline and a 28% decline year-over-year, which was in line with our expectations and result of our successful strategy to optimize both traffic conversion and segment mix to deliver maximum returns against our marketing investments. Moving to gross profit. Our second quarter gross profit increased 18% versus the prior year period to $21 million. Gross margin for the second quarter was 45.5%, lower than last year as well as sequentially as expected due to further net revenue mix shift towards payer. For the remainder of 2024, we would expect gross margin to remain around this level. Turning to operating expenses. Our GAAP operating expenses for the second quarter increased 1% year-over-year to $24.4 million. Excluding stock-based compensation and non-recurring items, our Q2 operating expenses amounted to approximately $19.8 million, a reduction of $2 million compared to the same period of last year. The benefits of our cost discipline over the last several quarters is beginning to show the operating leverage inherent in the business. While we’ve made tremendous progress in rightsizing our cost structure and enhancing organizational efficiencies, we remain vigilant when it comes to managing our cost base. We continue to drive efficiency in our marketing spend despite elevated media costs in the market as a whole. We’ve been able to observe the strength of our brand and continued strong organic growth and do more with less through media optimization and diversification, primarily with programmatic media and influencer marketing. We continue to see that focusing on payer coverage across our messaging and in all media channels is the most cost effective way to acquire the right members, given the high intent and the longer tenure of covered members. As we grow our covered lives base, we will continue to broaden targeting and drive a higher conversion rate of that traffic, further lowering the cost to acquire a member. Moving to profitability. GAAP net loss was $500,000, $4.2 million improvement versus the same period a year ago. Adjusted EBITDA was $1.2 million, an improvement of $5.2 million year-over-year, driven by higher revenue and gross profit with a lower cost base of normalized OpEx versus the same period a year ago. Turning to the balance sheet. We ended the quarter with $114.9 million in cash and cash equivalents, down $5.4 million sequentially from Q1. The decline was driven by our share repurchase activity. We bought back approximately $8 million during the quarter, leaving roughly $7 million available under the program we announced earlier this year. Today we announced that our Board of Directors increased the size of our share repurchase authorization by $25 million. This is in addition to the original $15 million authorization. Finally, we’re reiterating our 2024 guidance, which calls for revenue in the range of $185 million to $195 million and adjusted EBITDA between $4 million and $8 million for the full year. We continue to grow our payer business and remain enthusiastic about the opportunities ahead, including adding new covered lives from both commercial plans and executing on our early progress in Medicare. In direct enterprise, we’re optimistic about the strength of our pipeline and the demand we’re seeing across a diverse set of enterprises, including cities, municipalities and employers. This is a testament to the strength of the Talkspace brand and the large and growing demand for quality mental health care in the U.S. To summarize, the results reported today mark further progress and reinforce our conviction in our enterprise and payer focused strategy. While work remains Talkspace is in a position to continue to drive profitable growth and capitalize on the many opportunities ahead of us. With that, we’ll open up the call for questions.

Operator: Thank you. We will now begin the question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] Your first question comes from the line of Stephanie Davis of Barclays (LON:BARC). Your line is now open.

Stephanie Davis: Hey guys, congrats on the quarter. Thanks for taking my question.

Jon Cohen: Good morning.

Stephanie Davis: Good morning and welcome to some of the new generations. So government lives are becoming a bigger part of your story, right? You’ve got the Medicare rollout, we now have TRICARE. With that in mind, how should we think about these economics and how they compare to commercialize? And now that we’ve got a bit more time with these populations, do we have any inklings on how utilization and maybe other usage metrics compare?

Jon Cohen: So first off, the Medicare really we have no data yet, quite honestly on what that’s going to look like. It’s really, really early days. We are, as we say, we’re in 12 states. We’ll be in 50 by the end of the year. But we really have no line of sight yet on what that’s going to look like. We have not yet quite honestly launched a fully baked marketing plan to go to mark with Medicare as we’re looking to make sure we’re in some of the larger Medicare Advantage plans as we move the plan forward. So really, no data yet. We suspect on Medicare reimbursement versus the commercials, but I just – I’m just not prepared to talk about it yet because I don’t have anything to tell you yet.

Ian Harris: Yes, Stephanie, good morning. This is Ian. As you can imagine, done a lot of analysis sort of proactively about it, but as Jon mentioned, we want to be really methodical about how we roll out in terms of the marketing initiatives. As you can imagine, there’s an element of, call it critical mass before national advertising makes sense. And so while we’re on track to get to that 50 state target by the end of the year that we talked about, we’re waiting a little bit to really sort of start opening up the marketing spigot, which we’re going to do very deliberately and carefully. And as Jon mentioned in his prepared remarks, we’ll be announcing our first Medicare Advantage plan, likely early Q4. And so I would say at that point we’ll probably be close to that critical mass point, but we’ll start spending more capital around it. But it all comes – what I think you’re alluding to it all factors into, right, the ultimate contribution analysis we’re trying to solve for and how we go about marketing to those members.

Jon Cohen: I want to – Stephanie, one of the important, really unknowns for us and anybody on the Medicare market is we don’t know what the LTV is going to be on Medicare, right? So it’s not just the issue of what we’re going to get reimbursed, but how long are they going to stay on the platform, how much longer than a commercial payer or a younger person, let’s put it that way. So those are all contributing to a little bit of what’s going to happen, and it’s – there’s just a bunch of unknowns still.

Stephanie Davis: Okay. Understood. I guess flip side of that, looking at your cost structure, we’ve seen some pretty steady declines in OpEx over the past few years and it’s starting to flatten out this quarter. So can you walk us through kind of the buckets of cost optimization and what’s left? Or is that flattening more a function of the costs associated with this Medicare rollout and the TRICARE wins? All you guys are doing behind the scenes against these lives up and running?

Ian Harris: It’s more the former, right? I wouldn’t look at our current quarter and assume we’re holding back our marketing initiatives overall targeting member media, if that’s what’s in your question. I would say obviously with me coming in and being able to take a fresh look at our cost base overall, I do think there’s some opportunity which we’re already sort of actioning a few initiatives to call it save in certain G&A areas and reinvest those savings into more revenue generating things, whether it’s new marketing initiatives, right, talking about Medicare is just one of those. But also importantly, I think a lot of the sort of longer-term revenue generating investments we’re making both on product, new product development and also just in our platform overall. So one of the things I’m sort of wrestling a little bit is there’s no shortage of really exciting, high impact, sort of attractive ROI projects that are competing for capital inside the business. And so the more we can sort of optimize around the margins and save a little bit, the more budget we’ll have for those sorts of things.

Stephanie Davis: And that’s it. Thank you very much. Very helpful.

Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Charles Rhyee from TD (TSX:TD) Cowen. Please go ahead.

Lucas Hunt: Hi, this is Lucas Hunt for Charles. Wanted to ask about your Humana TRICARE East contract and get some more details there. By our math, this contract could represent somewhere in the neighborhood of $12 million to $14 million in annual contract value. One, does that math seem right or in the ballpark? And then two, how should we think about the timing of that contract and how it rolls out? Should we think of it as a one start, or should we think of it being a rollout period across multiple states?

Jon Cohen: Yes, so, well, I’ll talk about that. The rollout is nothing. Once we’re live, we’re live. There was always been no matter who we add on. Yes, I’m having trouble, Lucas, you’re typing in the background. I can’t hear you. Sorry, somebody’s typing. So the Medicare rollout is across states, but it is a national rollout and it just takes some time to get everybody on board, although – we announced it purposely because we were ready to go. I would say on just on the opportunity side, just some data. The current rate of depression on military – active military is 23%. The suicide rate in the last several years has increased by 40%. So we know that the – unfortunately, the opportunity in the military and defense is actually is fairly high, probably close to and similar to what we’re seeing in teens and what we suspect we’ll see in seniors over the age of 65. In terms of risks…

Ian Harris: Yes, we don’t comment on sort of payer by payer, contract by contract values, but I think you can maybe back into it a little bit, just given yesterday’s press release around the covered lives. And to Jon’s point, I would – we’re in market already. We’re working very closely with them to try to figure out how to most effectively and quickly roll this out to their population, because for all the reasons Jon laid out, it’s a very high priority for them and very high for us. And so, as we’ve said before, we typically would help folks externally to budget, call it six or so months, to really see that sort of initial step up in revenue from a new population launch. And that’s just a little bit of integration back office less interesting stuff perhaps, but also just getting the word out to those covered members to let them know, hey, this benefit is available, it’s accessible today and it’s de minimis to zero out of pocket for you. And so you can – yes, maybe back into it a little bit, but I would say give it a couple quarters to really start to see the revenue show up in our consolidated P&L.

Lucas Hunt: Okay. Appreciate the color on that. And then my other question is, one of your competitors recently announced that it would look to implement payer coverage for what has largely been a direct consumer, telehealth, mental and behavioral health business. Would like to hear a little bit about how you’re thinking about this change in the competitive landscape.

Jon Cohen: Yes, so I’ll – I’m not going to comment specifically on any specific competitor, what they do or what they want to. But what I will do is give you a little bit of color on what it takes to go in network, so that you have an idea of where we’ve been on basically a two and a half year journey to get to where we are. And I think there’s really four areas to consider when anybody is going to move like we did from a consumer market into a fee for service reimbursed model through the insurer. So the first is a product design. The design of product for a person who has insurance is significant. And it takes a fair amount of investment of time and resources to be able to establish the workflow for that kind of patient, which is very different than a consumer, which includes building a total eligibility capability to be able to determine eligibility, determine copay, determine deductible, and give the patient a really adequate look at what it could or could not cost them as they go into network. That’s in addition to being able to bill and collect from the payers and the remaining revenue that may or may not sit on the table. So that’s – the first is product design. The second, if you go, is actually getting into network. The ability to go to a payer, negotiate a contract, complete the contract, and then operationalize it like we just talked with military, we launched the military yesterday, but the time from when we first began discussing to them to now has been a significant amount of time. Now, in addition is once you get the contract is the ability to operationalize that for a payer. That’s bringing them – that’s a significant issue relative to making it so that it could actually happen based on what the contract is and the certain contract metrics. So I would say that also getting into network, you’ve probably seen some of the major payers have made formal announcements about narrowing their networks. They’ve decided that they may have too many telehealth companies. So there has been announcement recently to narrow. I would say the third is credentialing. Credentialing therapists for payers is a significant uplift, which we’ve spent an enormous amount of time investing in our therapy network to get to where we are. And that means, particularly experience with adherence to NCQA standards, establishing formal credentialing processes, verification, certifications, employment history, et cetera, ongoing monitoring to be able to ensure compliance because what’s going to happen is, if the payers audit us, they audit our therapist, and they audit to see how they’re doing. And each payer, believe it or not has unique requirements and certain processes that they want you to put in place. The fourth is really maintaining quality control. It's a really significant issue in terms of developing reporting metrics, which could include things like clinical impact, clinical documentation, switching dates, and then all of this leads eventually to value-based contracts. So the reason I tell you all that is we're two and a half years into this journey, so any entity out there, and there are several who are considering or talking about getting into network, it's just that going to take them some time to get there.

Lucas Hunt: Understood. Thanks for all the color.

Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Ryan Daniels of William Blair. Please go ahead.

Jack Senft: Yes. Hey, guys, this is Jack Senft on for Ryan Daniels. Thanks for taking the questions. First, and this is similar to Stephanie's question, but can you just kind of talk about the early momentum, I mean, if any, that you're seeing within the Medicare population and kind of if there have been any challenges you have identified within this population and then maybe just a quick second part, are there any learnings for when you launch in the states beyond the 12 that you're already launched? Thanks.

Jon Cohen: No, I wouldn't say, there's any learnings. I said – I would say that there is – we know that there is a significant market and interest on Medicare. We know that because we know how many people have already gone to the site to determine whether or not their Medicare eligible or not. That is a significant number. I'll reiterate what Ian said, the reason we're – our launch plan is developed the way it is, is we don't want lots of people to come to the site and then find out that they're not eligible yet because we're not in their state. So, and in addition, remember, you have two very large Medicare populations. You have standard Medicare which 80% is covered, and then a lot of people have a secondary insurance. The other huge part of the market is Medicare Advantage. So as Ian said, as we get launched into Medicare Advantage a little bit further down, end of Q3, Q4, that means that the opportunity for essentially any Medicare person to become eligible. So that's really what we're trying to do. We're trying to time it so that we have the best possibility to capture as many patients as possible. But I'll reiterate the interest because we announced has been significant.

Ian Harris: Yes, Jack, I would just add on, so a lot of inbound interest simply from our sort of one-off press release in May, we used the phrase launch for those 12 states. I would say the way we think about more internally in terms of how we're planning is we actually haven't even launched, we've made available in 12 states. We're really holding back because again, there's a trade off on paying a premium to hyper focus our marketing outreach into those 12 states versus, we believe, a better cost benefit of waiting for that sort of critical mass and having a bit more scale of the tipping point, which what we're communicating is. Think about that as like an early Q4. And so as it relates to sort of forecasting opportunity. Just to remind you what we said last quarter is, this has always been for us, a fairly modest, I'd say, very modest contributor to 2024 revenue, given the sort of Q4 ramp up. And so I would view it much more as a material driver of top line in 2025.

Jack Senft: Okay, understood. Thanks for the color. As a follow up to, and I may have missed this in your prepared remarks, but G&A expense was up just a bit sequentially and as a percent of revenue. Is there anything that drove this specifically and maybe how should we think about the quarterly cadence of G&A expense going forward from here? Thanks.

Ian Harris: No, I mean, nothing to call out for this quarter as a percentage of sales, but I would say this sort of level that we're at – this quarter is probably a fair sort of benchmark baseline going forward. And again, the composition of SG&A to me matters a lot, right. So I think the absolute number is a fair baseline here, but where that capital is actually being spent underneath is a huge focus of mine. And so to the earlier question, right, I'd like to save in some areas more on the G&A side and be able to either let that fall to the bottom line and/or and it'll be a combination of all three invest in these long-term sort of product initiatives through our product and tech team, and that will drive revenue sort of medium and longer term, as well as reinvest some of those savings into some of our marketing initiatives, again, carefully and deliberately, which obviously contributes to sort of near-term and medium term revenue in that it helps drive new members and utilization.

Jack Senft: Okay, perfect. Thank you and congrats again.

Ian Harris: Thank you.

Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Ryan MacDonald of Needham. Please go ahead.

Ryan MacDonald: Thanks for taking my questions. Maybe just another one on the Medicare rollout, do you expect to be rolled out in all 50 states in time for open enrollment later this year? And how should we think about the magnitude of maybe the marketing spend that would be associated around open enrollment given the importance for Medicare? And is this sort of baked into your expectations currently for adjusted EBITDA for the full year? Thanks.

Jon Cohen: Yes, so I don't know the concluding date on open enrollment, but I would say we're going to be right in the middle of it. So in addition, we'll be what I believe is enough of the Medicare Advantage to benefit to some degree for the rollout in the mid to late fall of the Medicare Advantage rollout also. So I think we're going to be, honestly, we'll probably be right in the middle of it, so we should be able to take advantage of that. Remember, there are existing 65 million Medicare lives, so this is just a huge number of patients who currently are in. But my predictions will be right in the middle and I reiterated is we now at least have some indication of the size and interest of the Medicare population to get their therapy through Talkspace.

Ian Harris: To your question, I think on spend, we're not assuming a massive spike in this grand reveal when we launch Medicare. I would say, it factors into just our overall sort of marketing, budgeting and where we want to deploy capital. For similar to the teams contract, right, where it's a very sort of unique demographic, unique population that consumes media differently than the sort of 18 to 64 general commercial population. That's obviously a similar case here with Medicare. And so we're actually exploring a lot of interesting partnerships, new channels, sort of potential, what we would hope to be ultimately tack accretive ways to reach these folks efficiently and sort of cost effectively. So I wouldn't expect any material impact to EBITDA driven by this year in a negative sense in terms of rollout.

Ryan MacDonald: I appreciate the color there. Maybe second on the Direct-to-Enterprise channel, specifically your commentary around the employer channel, we're starting to see some survey data for 2025 that benefits and wellness and particularly mental health, mental wellness is increasing in priority for organizations with 500 employees and less and then 500 to 5,000 employees. Just wondering if you're starting to see maybe this as sort of increased level of demand in sort of the early stages of your pipeline development and whether you feel like it's strong enough environment to incrementally invest on that employer channel side. Thanks.

Jon Cohen: Yes, I could confirm what you're saying is that on the mid to lower level number of employees firms, we are seeing continued significant interest in supporting mental health as an issue. And our – interesting enough, our offering because it's a pure-play mental health is getting a lot of attention because it is the number one issue. And there are quite honestly a lot of employers that are not prepared to deal with a large number of other small point solutions in their EAP programs. And what they're doing is, they are concentrating on mental health. So we have seen and our pipeline continues to be to grow for that, for that particular environment. And then we also have small companies who actually self signing up. We have on the web the ability with, if you have 100 employees or less to actually sign up with Talkspace for your employees. And we're seeing traction there also.

Ian Harris: Yes, just on DTE overall, the short answer is yes, I mean, absolutely. We're seeing that demand. We see that in our pipeline sort of both in terms of growth, but more importantly in terms of development. As Jon mentioned, we introduced recently this self-serve portal for SMB for sub 100 employees. We may actually – we're getting like organic amount interest without a doing very much just yet around sort of getting the word out there. We've also made lots of progress in recent quarters with the sort of broker community who works more in the middle market, right. So in the sense of trying to variablize our sales force, we're working with a lot of – think of them as like VARs or in software resellers to really leverage these existing relationships that are being sold into these middle market. And sort of piggybacking on those discussions to add mental health Talkspace as a point of sale.

Jon Cohen: I would say, I mean, just broadly in the DTE business, taking a step back, it was another strong quarter of year-on-year growth, right, we grew 20%. Last quarter, we mentioned the timing of net new wins being variable quarter-to-quarter, just like any sort of enterprise business is. I spent a lot of time in with enterprise software businesses and it's very similar dynamics. But based on what we're seeing in terms of RFP flow, our pipeline health, our pipeline development, we're very confident in the growth of that business this year. On the team side, we continue to get a ton of inbound interest. A lot of that's driven by obviously what's now we would view as our proven ability to really excel here, right. Just point to New York and Baltimore and that sort of core set of capabilities that's very difficult to replicate on the product side. And we've talked before about how popular async is. While we don't give sort of product level guidance, what I will say about DTE, just to help be all frame sort of your modeling on a year-on-year basis from 2023 to 2024, we expect annual growth to sort of be in the high teens or better. So hopefully that can give you a little bit of guidance in terms of the cadence. But overall, we feel really confident about what we're seeing in the pipeline and RFP flow.

Ryan MacDonald: Excellent. Thanks for the call.

Operator: Okay, that was our final question. Ladies and gentlemen, that concludes today's call. Thank you all for joining. You may now disconnect.

This article was generated with the support of AI and reviewed by an editor. For more information see our T&C.

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