Cantaloupe ($CTLP) CEO Ravi Venkatesan Shared The Company's Growth Plan With Adam Sarhan - podcast episode cover

Cantaloupe ($CTLP) CEO Ravi Venkatesan Shared The Company's Growth Plan With Adam Sarhan

Jun 14, 202324 minSeason 10Ep. 5
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Episode description

6/14/23


Ravi Venkatesan - Chief Executive Officer Cantaloupe, Inc. $CTLP shared his vision and the company's growth plan going forward.


Website:

https://www.cantaloupe.com/


About Ravi:

Ravi Venkatesan was named chief executive officer and a member of the Board of Directors at Cantaloupe in September 2022, after serving as chief operating officer starting in February 2022 and as chief technology officer from December 2020. He is responsible for leadership of the company’s architecture, development, network and business operations, product teams, as well as customer success. A proven leader with extensive expertise in product development, information systems, software development and program management, Mr. Venkatesan brings more than 20 years of experience in driving innovative change within technology environments.


Previously, Mr. Venkatesan was Head of Innovation at Bakkt. He held the dual roles of chief technology officer and chief product officer at Bridge2 Solutions, preceding its sale to ICE, the parent company of Bakkt. Prior to his position at Bakkt he was the vice president of Information Technology Strategy and Delivery at Cbeyond. Earlier in his career he spent time as a consulting leader with Accenture.


Mr. Venkatesan graduated from Bangalore University with a degree in Electronics and went through a post graduate pogram in Finance and Information Management from the Management Development Institute.


About Cantaloupe, Inc. 

Cantaloupe, Inc. is a software and payments company that provides end-to-end technology solutions for the self-service economy. Cantaloupe is transforming the self-service retail community by offering one integrated solution for payments processing, logistics, and back-office management. The company’s enterprise-wide platform is designed to increase consumer engagement and sales revenue through digital payments, digital advertising, and customer loyalty programs, while providing retailers with control and visibility over their operations and inventory.


As a result, customers ranging from vending machine companies to operators of micro markets, gas and car charging stations, laundromats, metered parking terminals, kiosks, amusements, and more can run their businesses more proactively, predictably, and competitively.


To learn more about Cantaloupe, Inc., visit: cantaloupe.com

Transcript

One. And welcome everybody to another episode of smart money Circle. I'm your host, Adam, sorry. Han with me today is Ravi, who's this CEO of cantaloupe ticker? Symbol is see T LP. And it's the second time on the show. Robbie, thank you so much for coming on the show. We greatly, appreciate it. Adam, it's great to be back here and look forward to the conversation. Oh, can you just start wrapping by giving us an overview about cantaloupe and explain some of

your competitive advantages? Please Yad cantaloupe. We are the largest technology provider. Enabling self-service Commerce in North America and are on a journey to be the largest technology. Provider powering self-service Commerce for the whole globe. And in plain English, what we do is we build the technology that accepts payments at unattended locations. So they thus payment by definition has to be self service because there's nobody no store clerk there.

And then we use the acceptance of payment combined with telematics. Make an autonomous location dispenser product or a service. The product could be a bag of chips, from a vending machine. The service could be a car wash or a parking gate opening and closing. So in all those scenarios, we build the telematics to interface with all those machines and make them dispense,

the service or product. And we also build Self Service optimized payment acceptance device that takes Red card payments, Apple pay, Loyalty cards and you know, various kinds of payments and we also process the payments behind the scenes and offer software as a service that lets companies that have these self-service kind of businesses. You know, I mentioned parking I mentioned car washes pending cafeterias where you can grab scan pay at a kiosk and go all

those types of businesses? We provide software as a service that's kind of like the Erp. For them to manage their business sitting in their office at a computer and they get visibility to inventory levels and warehouses different locations. You know, drivers needing to be scheduled to go out and restock all of those things. So, that's kind of the business in a nutshell. I love it. So, your publicly traded company, we can see the numbers. You're expected to be profitable

this year and again next year. So I was going to ask you, how's business, but I'm assuming business is pretty well, but I'd like to hear from you, how's business? Yeah, it's very exciting. Ting time for us at cantaloupe because we've had a real Renaissance in the industry as a whole with more people moving towards self service. And I think that trend is just you know at the very beginning of kind of a secure long-term Trend.

As far as the company itself is concerned, we went through a bit of a turn around face between 2020 and 2022 and that was driven by, you know, covid caused a lot of people to not show up at offices. And a good portion of our business is driven by office, break room experiences. You know, whether they are, they are vending or whether they are. As I mentioned, grabs can pay and go experiences, so that took

a hit. And then we also had some issues with a prior management where the company was delisted went through some trouble. And so there was an activist shareholder, Hudson executive Capital that came in reconstituted, the entire board and the management team including bringing me on On and we sort of set up a turn around face for a couple of years. And then a growth phase beyond that. I'm happy to say.

We've executed on all metrics that we laid out for ourselves through the turn around, and are now well into the growth phase and at an analyst day at the NASDAQ last year. In December, we outlined a 3-year vision for the company, along, with operating metrics and financial metrics and that's created quite a bit of excitement. And as we have now, had a few Orders of executing against that

plan and building credibility. You know, in this bad Market where most companies are pushing their 52, we close. We are pushing our 52-week highs and, you know, the Russell's had near - returns and our, our stock is since I've been in the seat, our stock is 120% which, you know, not that I want to set myself up to sustain that every six months, but very excited about the market response so far. Our and we're just beginning this journey.

So it's really early days and lots of upside, you know, I love it. I mean, your stock is up 70 percent this year or thereabouts if I'm correct. And yep. And it's more than doubled from the October lows of last year and hats off to you that the vision is the execution phenomenal job. The turnaround is obviously working from the stocks that you guys are expected to earn around seven cents this year and then 23 cents next year. Which is an increase of almost

230 percent. That's fantastic growth. So let's talk about that vision of future and the compelling future. The growth possibilities, were you located now, as far as geography or only North America, are you International, then your plans to expand going forward. So we have historically been very strong North America. So that's US and Canada presents more. And now Mexico is included in that.

So, Continue to consolidate our presence there but we are now also going into Latin America, more broadly and Europe. So add those as kind of a phase one, international expansion, I describe it as a three-year journey of setting up operations, setting up partnership sales teams and starting to actually derive Revenue. We are around the midpoint of that three-year Journey for those geographies. So we now have some revenues that are already coming from those.

Those geographies though, it's not meaningful for this fiscal year and our fiscal year ends in June. So we are at the last last few weeks of our fiscal year but in fiscal 24, which begins next month for us, we expect to get too much more meaningful and material revenues. And by the time we get to fiscal 26 which is a couple of years out, we expect International to be 15, maybe even twenty percent of our total revenues, our love that and I know your company has

very little debt. What are your plans there with debt and how do you use? Heard you get rid of it or what are the plans with that? Yeah, so we are in a net positive position in terms of cash on hand versus debt.

It's always a choice to take down some of that debt and we continue to evaluate that kind of on a quarter to quarter basis, if interest rates stabilized, maybe even head down, there may be less incentive to do that versus other opportunities for Capital. Allocation, if interest rates continue to stay this High, then there is incentive to kind of take it down a little little bit and and use some of our capital

for that. So it's a, it's an ongoing conversation with the board and with the leadership team to look at the best use of the dollars that we're generating out of the business as well as what we have from debt. So yeah, I'm the company had a lot. You have to keep free cash flow so it's a position to be in and I know management owns a bunch of stock. You've got Fun Zone, bunch of the stock. The next question I have for you rabbie's. Respect to go, I guess. Valued areas or under cap.

But I guess undervalued areas that you can grow and where some areas that are you looking to grow, would it be possibly a i yes or no. And or other areas that you can speak to one is going to play a major role in many Industries, including ours. And in ours, there are a few specific areas where we've invested heavily and are now starting to see some returns and and will continue to invest

heavily in those areas. So, number one is a high-powered merchandising so when You think about these unattended locations? You know, whether whether they are little Bistro at an airport which is selling salads and sandwiches to, you know, two lockers to catering dining ahead. There's a convergence happening of all ways in which somebody wants to shop for their food and beverage right online, experience the delivery experience, whether it's an Uber Eats or, you know, things like

that. The The break room experience, they're all converging and the hot food cafeteria, which used to be in corporate break rooms is going away. It's going out, and it's too expensive, not economically feasible, labor, shortages in all. Those are driving it out, so which is great for us. What that leads to is. I want to be smart about

freshness and variety, right? So if, if I'm at a office location, I don't want to eat the same turkey sandwich every day for lunch, I want to have sushi one day. And I I'll have a tuna sandwich the other day, so it's just creating that experience requires a lot of intelligence and AI is great at, you know, that kind of merchandising and it could be. Even as simple as you know, blue Gatorade in a vending machine versus Coke on a particular time of the year, you know, or whatever.

Those type of decisions, right, right. That's finding a lot of value from that. That's one the other place where we use AI, pretty heavily is What we call Dynamic scheduling. So before we built this Innovation, you used to have people show up every Tuesday to restock, you know, whether it's office coffee supplies or you know, or these marketplaces or whatever.

And the problem with that is half the time somebody would show up with, you know, a lot of stuff and they would find that sales hadn't happened and they wasted a trip and the other half. They would find out that they showed up in the Shelves were empty for two days and they lost sales, right? So so on both sides, it was - and with our Dynamic scheduling. Now it's real-time inventory across warehouse and locations optimized for forecast sales, you know, using artificial intelligence.

So and and then doing something called pre-treating. So what happens is in the warehouse itself, they build kids for each location, there are exactly tailored to what is needed to be restocked at that location. Okay? The god of them. And artificial intelligence optimized.

When a driver is going to go to a location, it's not every Tuesday or every Thursday anymore, it can vary and it's dynamically scheduled and it gives them their, you know, pick list and it gives them their products and it gives them their go here on Monday and don't go to this other place and it's very intelligent in terms of taking into account factors like, hey, you're anyway going to this place. So, even though this other place is not fully empty, it makes

sense to go there, right? Stuff like that, but those Those are two big areas where we are doing a lot with AI, and then we are doing a lot with aii around trouble management. So, especially when you have unattended locations, you know, if if that parking gate has a problem and it's not opening, you're going to have some very pissed-off customers, right? Especially if they're stuck inside. So, go ahead proactively detects something, right?

And then dispatch for trouble is a is another big portion of kind of what we do, right? So that's Hopefully, that gives you some color on the AI side. Now, I love that. And then is that proprietary AI? Or is that just chat EBT, or is it? How does that work? So it's the dynamic scheduling piece and the merchandising pieces so far have been proprietary AI, but they use fairly standard algorithms that are used by the the broader retail World in terms of doing basket analysis and several,

things like that. Some of it is protected very proprietary and protected by our patterns we have More than 70 patterns and that creates a nice mode for our business against competition. Right? And so, some of this is in that category, chat GP is exciting for us, in accelerating, our customer support experience. And in accelerating, our internal kind of data intelligence platforms and things like that. So, we're doing a lot with chat G, PT more in R&D at this stage

in those areas, right? And I think it's early, but I'm very excited. What could come out of it and not to mention the organic, you know, at our company I have encouraged people to, you know, in a compliant way experiment. And so, we've got marketing, people writing content, using chat GPT. And I even have somebody who wrote a contract using chargeability, and our chief legal officer was actually, this is actually not bad, it was so, so it can be a Time Saver in many different areas.

Engineers are obviously using it to write and refine code in some Cases. So, in a lot of places, we've got it. We're also putting a lot of controls in place to make sure we don't shoot ourselves in the foot from either compliance perspective or, you know, chat GPT is stealing someone else's code or copying content from somebody else's website. So you put controls in place to ensure. All that doesn't happen. Now. That's wonderful.

I heard of crazy story. A lawyer had used it for some kind of historical precedent, and it was just all bogus was all wrong. You got that, you got nailed for it. Okay, wonderful. So Cube to follow up, question to all of that. First off, you mentioned to make sure the risks don't happen. So like in other words, a machine doesn't know, not open, right? So how do you handle risk and then what steps do you take to mitigate risk and or help with

risk management? Yeah. It's what we call Telemetry, which is, you know, we try to get a lot of data points in the operating environments that we are present in. So that way, we can detect trouble way before it manifests in an Actual problem that impacts a consumers experience. Okay. So in a nutshell how we handle that and and it has a lot of value and we charge our customers per month, you know, per location price for it and and it's a good profitable business and adds a lot of value.

Excellent. And then the next question with respect to growth going forward, I know you guys by definition your Innovative company. You see things, what areas are you looking to grow into where either you haven't been there? You're just starting to scratch the surface therefore for more growth with your Five-Year Plan. You know, the EV charging spaces, one of those. Not the only one and amusement

is another. Now, these are all areas where or a variety of different reasons, the opportunity is starting to mature. So, what happened in EV charging was? Everybody came up with, hey, I'm going to search for a location on my app when find it, and I'm going to make the payment and do everything on my app. Well, now the states in Ian particular are starting to take the lead and saying that's not an inclusive solution and you need an open-loop payment solution where I can use my

credit card. I can use other normal payment mechanisms you know just as I can at a gas station, right? So now the charging station manufacturers who didn't build that into their solution out of the gate are looking for retrofit opportunities where they can collaborate with somebody like us and say put a card reader on there and and in Will the telematics to tell the charging station to dispense

charge? And and also by the way, now that you have that a company like us can monitor the efficiency of the charging station. We can monitor its connectivity to the grid, we can monitor, we can report on all the transactions in a very clever manner. So there is a value chain that

we are ascending. If you will, in that space, Amusement is another, you know, we have a pretty good presence already but there are various types of gaming machines in bars in, you know, in various other locations that are also suitable for Self Service payment in telematics and and we are expanding that pretty aggressively as well. I love it. No, the EV stuff. And even the amusement stuff is fantastic. Especially as people want those experiences, the TV cars.

I just had the CEO of wall box on which they specialize in making EV boxes, and they have it where the generator for your house. It could be your battery for the car. So the car You know, and you know better, it's fantastic. So okay that's beautiful. I guess. My next question from a shareholder standpoint is the growth looks very clear that in my mind's eye at least I see that the risk. You met, you doing your best to mitigate the risk.

The what? Let's talk Macro for a little bit, the overall economy and pure fear of a recession, the FED raising rates. How does all of that factor into your plan going forward? Yeah. There are some, some things that can be Tailwind for us in. Some, that can be had when Zell Outline them, if we have a recession that prompts a lot more companies to lay off a lot more workers that's had been for our business because we do drive a lot of business, through break room experiences at companies.

Now, what we've seen so far is that the layoffs have been restricted more to Tech and very high and white collar jobs. They in when you get to, you know, lower-income workers the opportunity. Is it is true. There is a severe shortage, and that hasn't changed. And there are three jobs for every person, right? Almost. So we have a long way to go before I think that problem can become a reality but in past recessions we've seen unemployment climb.

Very steeply very quickly. So that's a risk, right? The Tailwind side is if the bargaining power, which is, you know, been heavily with employees, especially in White Collar jobs. Start shifting because of recessionary conditions, more towards employers, then you might have more employers, you know, like Google did like some of the other companies have done start asking workers to come back to the office, which is Tailwind for us, you know.

So if workers come back instead of two days a week, three days a week. And if more remote workers, start thinking that, hey, you know, I better be in the office and interacting with people or my job is going to be at risk. That's actually a positive for us and love that. Anything else that I didn't ask that you'd like to share with

you before we wrap up for today. I think just in, you know, you you've covered a broad swath of everything, the one area, which maybe we didn't touch on is, hey, how are you? How are you getting operating leverage in the business and how is the comfortability growing, you know, this sharply because our our forecast for the long-term or Outlook call for an ebitda growth rate a kegger of 70%, right?

However, the top line revenue is growing at 15%, so that throws some people off in terms of how you growing Revenue to 15%, and yet you grow your ebitda at at 70%. So the answer is this, when at least when I got here, the business was more heavily tilted towards equipment and payments and software was kind of a third leg of the stool, right? Not necessarily the big portion. What?

We've now done is we've outlined a strategy where software is going to become the biggest, Part of the business and and software has just to break that down. Historically equipment, margins have been - - climbing is 10%, and it's the razors that you sell to sell the razor blades late winter and the payment processing margins. Historically were at 8 to 10% and they were stuck there for many, many years and the software margins were good.

They were at 80% but the software business was growing very slow 46%. So what we've done is We've done a number of pivots and invested heavily in R&D on the software side, to build a lot of new modules and a lot of additional things. The AI powered merchandising is a good example, ability to change prices remotely is another example. So as a result, now we have shifted to where this fiscal year, our software growth of the subscription. Revenue growth has been in the

teens instead of being 46%. And next year and onwards we see it in the low 20s. So we know the soft Revenue at a much faster Pace in the 20-plus percent rate, right? And that's 80, plus percent margin. So as this becomes a bigger portion of the pie, the overall profitability of the business improves drastically, that's

one. The second thing we've done is, we've looked at the payment processing Revenue, very carefully and how we route payments and made some significant improvements there that have now brought it from the eight to ten percent, where it was for many, many years to the 14 to 16, Eighteen percent in the last several quarters and we've Consolidated that expertise and proven that we can do it. Not just, you know, flash in the pan 1/4 but repeatedly and consistently and we have a

pathway to get it more closer to the 20% Mark. So there is, you know, when we looked at it carefully and we said here are all the levers is all the work we have to do. We kind of outlined a 24-month roadmap and where the midpoint of it and we realized, you know, It's a half the gain so that that is another driver that makes it profitable. And in combination, you know these things are what is going

to drive our business there? Plus, we also stopped the heavier discounting on the equipment side, which have made that be profitable as well though. Marginally, it's not, you know, going to get to the the double digit of significant margin numbers, but at least we're not burning as much cash there. So that in combination all these three things, I've led to the better profitability and the better trajectory for profitability now, I love that.

So when you go, you said you're going to sell more software and make that piece of the pie bigger, is that selling to existing clients or is that going after new business or both. Both both more of it is, you know, to 70% is still continuing to upsell current customers. But there is a 30% factor which is more selling to newer customers and your logo. So it's a combination number. I got it. And then your R&D that Creating the new proprietary, all your patents.

Number one, number two, your proprietary AI. So on and so forth, one of those things do they have the ability to have a J curve where it could be exponential type growth or those things more moderate growth as far as the leading to the bottom line growing. So in terms of the revenue growth as of now, it's all aimed more at continuing to expand that software side and making it more profitable.

However, you know, like, any company we have, I call them our list of 325 Moon shots that, you know, if they take off, then they can dry the exponential growth. So we make a few of those bets but we're very disciplined about, let's not, you know, from a capital allocation perspective, that's that tends to be in there. 10 to 15 percent of our capex. Overall, Rd capex and the rest tends to be very focused on, you know, driving better profitability and driving incremental growth in the core

business, understood. Yeah, you just said, You meant as far as earnings are concerned, right? They tried the revenue and earnings got it. Okay wonderful. Well beautiful wrapping this has been fed super-fantastic. The company's cantaloupe ticker symbol to see TLP everybody. Go check it out. If people want to get in touch with you, Robbie what's the best way? They go on the website or, how should they connects going forward?

Yeah, my the website is great. My email is our venkatesa, which is my first initial, and last name at cantaloupe.com. That's a great way to get in touch as well. Beautiful, thank you so much. Hopefully, we'll have you on again soon. Alright, thanks Adam. Hopefully, we'll have you on again soon. Alright, thanks Adam.

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