PAR Technology (PAR) Q2 2025 Earnings Transcript

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Date

Friday, Aug. 8, 2025 at 9 a.m. ET

Call participants

  • Chief Executive Officer and President — Savneet Singh
  • Chief Financial Officer — Bryan Menar
  • Vice President, Investor Relations — Christopher Byrnes

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Risks

  • Management acknowledged that the POS business is progressing more slowly than we initially forecasted for fiscal Q2 2025 (period ended June 30, 2025). This is impacting short-term revenue in POS and payments for fiscal Q2 2025.
  • Hardware revenues were described as temporarily elevated due to uncertainty around tariffs, with management warning, "continued uncertainty around tariffs will increase volatility … and may have adverse effects on our hardware revenue and hardware gross margin."
  • Operator cloud and ARR growth decelerated in fiscal Q2 2025, with operator cloud ARR organic growth at 13% and total organic ARR growth at 16% year over year, both below historical trends, with acknowledgment of slower rollout timelines and contracted revenue hitting the P&L later than anticipated, possibly limiting full-year growth.
  • PAR Technology (NYSE:PAR) is focusing development resources on global tier one task POS deals at the expense of near-term revenue from previously signed implementations, with most of the multimillion-dollar backlog of task rollouts originally planned for fiscal Q2 2025 now deferred to 2026, which could impact topline and margins until rollout resumes in 2026.

Takeaways

  • Total revenue-- $112.4 million in revenue for fiscal Q2 2025, up 44% year over year, driven by subscription service revenues and hardware acceleration.
  • Adjusted EBITDA-- Adjusted EBITDA was $5.5 million for fiscal Q2 2025, an improvement of $9.9 million year over year, and includes $450,000 in non-period deferred contract cost charges in fiscal Q2 2025; would be $6 million excluding these items for fiscal Q2 2025.
  • Subscription revenue-- $72 million in subscription service revenue for fiscal Q2 2025, a 60% increase driven by 21% organic growth. This comprised 64% of total revenue for fiscal Q2 2025.
  • Annual recurring revenue (ARR)-- ARR reached $287 million, up 49% year over year for fiscal Q2 2025, with operator cloud at $119 million (a 42% increase) in operator cloud ARR for fiscal Q2 2025 and engagement cloud ARR up 55% year over year for fiscal Q2 2025 (organic ARR growth at 16% year over year for fiscal Q2 2025).
  • Hardware revenue-- Hardware revenue for the quarter was $27 million, an increase of 34% from the $20 million reported in the prior year. This was attributed to accelerated purchases in advance of potential tariffs in fiscal Q2 2025.
  • Gross margin-- Gross margin was $51 million, up 59% for fiscal Q2 2025, with subscription services margin at 55.3% GAAP and 66.4% non-GAAP for fiscal Q2 2025; management affirmed the adjusted subscription service margin baseline is expected to be between 66% and 67% for 2025.
  • Net loss from continuing operations-- Net loss from continuing operations (GAAP) was $21 million, or $0.52 per share for fiscal Q2 2025, an improvement from a $24 million loss, or $0.69 per share for fiscal Q2 2024.
  • Non-GAAP net income-- Non-GAAP net income was $1 million, or $0.03 per share for fiscal Q2 2025, versus a non-GAAP net loss of $8 million, or $0.23 per share in fiscal Q2 2024.
  • Operator cloud pipeline-- Over $20 million of ARR is tied to already contracted rollouts, providing strong future visibility and confidence. This does not include two mega tier one POS deals currently being pursued in the 2025 pipeline.
  • Multiproduct deals-- Seventy percent of Punch deals in fiscal Q2 2025 included additional products, compared to none in fiscal Q2 2024, and multiproduct contracts now represent a material ARPU uplift, with recent examples in Q1 showing ARPU per store increasing from around $2,500 to $7,000-$8,000 annually when customers adopt the full product suite.
  • Task POS strategy-- Rollouts paused to focus development on global tier one prospects, with the backlog of task platform rollouts deferred from fiscal Q2 2025 to 2026; acknowledged short-term sacrifice for long-term global expansion opportunity.
  • Cash position-- $85 million in cash and equivalents as of June 30, 2025; cash used in operating activities in fiscal Q2 2025 improved sequentially, and management expects positive operating cash flow for the remainder of 2025.
  • Retail segment-- Secured four enterprise wins in the convenience/fuel vertical in fiscal Q2 2025 and completed Skip self-checkout integration, expanding ARPU potential and customer penetration.
  • Guidance adjustment-- CEO Savneet Singh guided organic ARR growth to the "mid-teens" percent for 2025 due to delayed POS and payment rollouts, versus previous 20% target.

Summary

Management stated that the POS segment’s growth was hindered by slower rollouts and delayed deal signings in fiscal Q2 2025, directly impacting both current revenue and payment segment growth. The hardware segment benefited from accelerated customer purchases in anticipation of tariffs in fiscal Q2 2025, but the company cautioned this level is temporary and subject to future global trade risks. ARR rose sharply, increasing 49% year over year to $287 million in fiscal Q2 2025, but organic growth moderated in fiscal Q2 2025 due to deferred rollouts and a strategic decision to prioritize global tier one opportunities by pausing task POS implementation revenue until Q1 2026. CEO Savneet Singh clarified that in fiscal Q2 2025, 70% of new engagement deals included multiple products, which can have a meaningful impact on ARPU, while over $20 million in contracted POS ARR remains unrecognized until installation is completed as of fiscal Q2 2025.

  • Singh said, "we have significant committed rollout visibility through Q4, which will markedly increase POS growth in the second half of the year."
  • Menar noted, Subscription services continue to fuel our organic growth and represented 64% of total revenue in fiscal Q2 2025, a shift toward higher-margin business mix.
  • PAR Technology’s cross-sell momentum is evidenced by new product launches like CoachAI and a substantial increase in both pipeline value and direct multi-vertical wins in retail and convenience stores.

Industry glossary

  • ARPU: Average Revenue Per User, a key metric quantifying average annualized income per deployed site or customer.
  • Operator cloud: PAR Technology Corporation’s integrated suite of cloud-based solutions for restaurant operations, including POS, back office, and payments.
  • Task POS: PAR Technology Corporation's globally-focused point-of-sale platform; distinct from ParPOS, which targets domestic enterprise clients.
  • ParOps: PAR Technology Corporation’s rebranded back-office product suite, integrating with POS and other operational platforms.
  • Multiproduct deal: A contract where a single customer purchases multiple PAR Technology Corporation products (e.g., POS, loyalty, ordering), as opposed to single-point solutions.
  • Engagement cloud: PAR Technology Corporation’s suite of digital customer engagement solutions, including loyalty (Punchh), ordering, and marketing platforms.
  • Skip: Self-checkout solution integrated into PAR Technology Corporation’s retail offering, referenced as expanding ARPU and customer value.

Full Conference Call Transcript

Christopher Byrnes: Thank you, Lisa. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us today for PAR Technology Corporation's 2025 second quarter financial results call. Earlier this morning, we released our financial results. The earnings release is available on the Investor Relations page of our website at partech.com. You can also find the Q2 financials presentation as well as in our related Form 8-Ks furnished to the SEC. During the call this morning, we will reference non-GAAP financial measures, which we believe to be useful to investors and exclude the impact of certain items. A description and timing of these items, with a reconciliation of non-GAAP measures to the most comparable GAAP measures, can be found in our earnings release.

I would also like to remind participants that this conference call may include forward-looking statements that reflect management's expectations based on currently available data. However, actual results are subject to future events and uncertainties. The information on this conference call related to projections or other forward-looking statements may be relied upon and subject to the Safe Harbor statement included in our earnings release this morning and in our annual and quarterly filings with the SEC. Finally, I would like to remind everyone that this call is being recorded and will be made available for replay via a link available on the Investor Relations section of our website.

Joining me on the call today is PAR Technology Corporation's CEO and President, Savneet Singh, and Bryan Menar, PAR's Chief Financial Officer. I would now like to turn the call over to Savneet for the formal remarks portion of the call, which will be followed by general Q&A. Savneet?

Savneet Singh: Thank you, Christopher, and good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us today. We reported $112.4 million in revenues in the quarter, an increase of 44% year over year. We also continue to expand our profitability. Adjusted EBITDA came in at $5.5 million. This number includes $450,000 of accounting charges for non-period deferred contract costs, which, when further backed out, brings our EBITDA to $6 million for the quarter. Subscription services revenue increased by 60% in the quarter to $72 million from last year, and 21% organic when compared to Q1 2024. We delivered ARR of approximately $287 million, up 49% year over year, and achieved organic ARR growth of 16%, showing positive momentum across our platform.

As we just restarted our major rollout, we are prepping for several multiproduct rollouts later this year and early 2026. These results reflect the growing demand for unified technology in the food service industry and the better outcomes our solutions can deliver for brands. Now to dig into our business with further detail. Total operator cloud ARR ended at $119 million and grew 42% in the quarter, with organic growth at 13% when compared to the same period last year. This growth is slower than our historical trend due to the mid-quarter restart of BK, which only hit scale starting in June.

Crucially, we have significant committed rollout visibility through Q4, which will markedly increase POS growth in the second half of the year. We messaged on last quarter's call, in Q2, we restarted the working implementation of ParPOS and initiated the rollout of ParOps to their stores. We continue to receive very positive feedback from corporate and franchisee stakeholders alike, and this successful partnership was ultimately crucial, thus also contracting with Popeye's Louisiana Kitchen with ParOps. Outside of Burger King, we are seeing strong mid-market traction with 17 new direct POS logos signed in Q2 alone, continuing the trend from last quarter.

All of these deals were multiproduct, proving the strength of our product and better together value proposition versus up-and-coming point solution competitors or SMB providers trying to crack the enterprise. Our thesis that delivering outcomes of efficient operations and higher sales is playing out quickly in the mid-market and beginning to gain traction in the enterprise with proof points like ParOps and RBI. Our back office product suite, which we retitled from Data Central to ParOps earlier this year, is proving to be one of the most exciting areas of innovation and growth at PAR Technology Corporation. ParOps delivered a strong sales quarter with three new customer deals.

We also kicked off our implementation with Popeyes Louisiana Kitchen and Burger King. We believe that a key better together enhancement has been the addition of the delegate product suite, which we believe will drive our flywheel with strong multiproduct adoption. As an example of this, Coach AI, our AI-powered intelligent assistant, holds real-time POS data, drive-through timer information, and voice of the customer guest metrics to give in-store operators actual intelligence to maximize efficiency. It is a clear enhancement of both the POS and back office experience. We are at the point where ParOps itself is becoming a hero product within the PAR portfolio that is capable of driving cross-sell.

The ParOps product suite has a significant late-stage pipeline covering multiple existing and prospective tier one and two customers, and we are trending towards both 2025 and 2026 being record years for this product line. Separately, with respect to our task POS platform, we have aggressively repositioned our focus to pursue global tier one deals and realize the value that the PAR Umbrella brand brings to go-to-market efforts. We have gotten extremely compelling feedback from the biggest and fastest-growing brands that our task POS platform architecture is the best in the world for global brands pursuing international expansion.

Because of that, we have taken the important measure to add investment to this business while pausing projected rollouts to focus on building out the product for the slate of late-stage tier one prospective customers. A recent example of task potential is the recent launch of Wingstop's inaugural store in Australia this past quarter. We believe the near-term trade-off of growth for product build-out will set PAR up for massive success in the future. We anticipate rolling out our accrued multimillion-dollar backlog of tasks starting in Q1 2026. We believe our decision to run a double-pronged POS strategy with ParPOS for domestic brands and task for global brands will ensure we cover the maximum amount of enterprise concepts.

There is no one-size-fits-all with point-of-sale software, and with our current portfolio, we cover both domestic and global enterprise QSR brands while also building a pathway toward continued expansion in other hospitality verticals. Now on to payments. In the second quarter, PAR's payment business started a major shift in operating model, moving from 99% card-present transactions to now accepting and selling card-not-present transactions with the cross-sell of our PAR wallets, ordering, and retail solutions. Due to this shift in the timing around the attaching payments with ParPOS rollouts, we saw a slower than normal quarter in Q2. The 500-plus location card-not-present payment deals that we will announce very soon.

We continue to see PAR payments as a key and strategic growth driver for PAR Technology Corporation, with a much larger and future TAM given the addition of new sales channels and outlets. In short, Operator Cloud is uniquely positioned and hedged in the market to service both the dual need of revenue maximization and operational efficiency. While our business may not be consistent quarter to quarter, the 2025 pipeline keeps us very confident about the long-term growth with nearly $50 million in prospective ARR within just POS and back office. Further, our point-of-sale products have over $20 million of ARR tied to already contracted rollouts, giving high future visibility and confidence.

It's important to note that the aforementioned pipeline number does not even include two mega tier one deals we are pursuing. Moving to the engagement cloud. In Q2, we continued to strengthen our market position driven by robust customer demand and strong strategic innovation. We exceeded internal targets with engagement ARR increasing 55%, including 18.5% organic growth compared to Q2 last year. For enterprise restaurants, the growth trajectory of digital engagement programs significantly outpaced traditional sales channels. Despite broader industry headwinds and consumer spending, brands remain committed to enhancing their digital strategies with PAR's Punch ordering and wallet platforms being key focus points of investment.

In today's competitive market, where customer acquisition costs continue to rise, loyalty programs have shifted from optional extras to essential tools. They are critical not only for driving repeat business but also for building lasting emotional connections with guests. Our platforms, powered by a better together approach, uniquely position restaurants to capitalize on these opportunities and drive superior outcomes. As a result, we have begun winning multiproduct deals at an impressive rate. In Q2, we signed 10 new engagement mid-market and enterprise customer deals. 70% of these deals included multiple products, including Punch, ordering, and payments. Let me reiterate that point. 70% of our deals from Punch now include a second product. When last year, Q2, zero deals did this.

This is an enormous change at PAR Technology Corporation. Critical to this multiproduct evolution is the expansion of PAR ordering. We closed six new ordering deals this quarter, demonstrating momentum and growing demand for our comprehensive offerings. What's particularly noteworthy is that 100% of new Q2 ordering deals were cross-sells into our existing base. What largely drove that trajectory change in the cross-sell within the engagement cloud was our launch of a new suite of products. Our engagement, which unifies four essential pillars, marketing, ordering, loyalty, and data into one integrated solution. Even more exciting than our recent wins is our product momentum. The industry is ready to move beyond online ordering 1.0 and is actively seeking innovation.

Our development team velocity underscores this. Story point commitments have doubled compared to last year, meaning we are now launching twice the product volume. The perfect example of this is the embedded AI-driven tools proven to boost check size via intelligent upsell and drive higher one-to-one personalization through smart segment builder. We feel that our ordering product is now best in class versus the legacy peers focused on driving cash flow returns versus product outcomes. Similar to Operator Cloud, Engagement Cloud ended the quarter with a pipeline of over $50 million, providing strong visibility for future growth. Now turning to PAR retail. Retail delivered another strong quarter and is quickly becoming the second pillar of our multi-vertical strategy.

Our flywheel in convenience and fuel is starting to accelerate. In Q2, we secured four high-value enterprise wins. Historically, in the C-store industry, deals are chunky. In an average year, we would close two to four total. Our speed this year highlights the growing trend amongst operators. A move towards consolidation with a single trusted technology partner. We are building momentum and are actively engaged with eight more enterprise opportunities with the potential to close in the back half of this year. Additionally, this quarter, we completed the integration of our new self-checkout product, Skip. This is adding an extremely healthy ARPU white space and tight synergy to drive better outcomes for our customers.

Our largest customers are already in talks to expand their relationship with self-checkout. In comparison to restaurants, we see that while C-store deals move slower, they are highly strategic, long-term, multiproduct relationships that drive massive future potential to higher ARPU and expand within the PAR ecosystem. Just as important as new customer wins in C-stores is the expansion among existing customers. A standout example is EG Group, one of the largest global forecourt operators. Since launching on PAR retail, EG has scaled significantly, currently performing at nearly three times its original program metrics. More importantly, they are now actively evaluating additional PAR products, including self-checkout, to drive further operational efficiencies and open new revenue streams.

This kind of expansion, combined with the momentum we have winning new logos, demonstrates the beginning of our long-term flywheel in the convenience and fuel industry. We are clearly viewing the potential of this industry becoming a meaningful driver of PAR's growth overall. Moving to hardware. We had a stronger-than-planned quarter in hardware revenues with an increase of 33.5%. Clearly, there are a number of our hardware customers who accelerated their purchase ahead of tariffs being assigned. The continued uncertainty around tariffs will increase volatility into global trade policies and supply chains. We will constantly evaluate the current environment and will take the necessary steps to mitigate the impacts on our business to the best of our ability.

In summary, Q2 was a validation of PAR's platform strategy and market position. Q2 saw 27 new logos signed with PAR, of whom 19 were multiproduct. Across food service, we are seeing a definitive shift in buying behavior towards unified enterprise-grade solutions. An environment in which PAR is uniquely well-positioned as an industry leader. Our quarter-to-quarter movements are never linear. Our 2025 pipeline of new deals stands near $100 million, which gives us great confidence around long-term durable growth. What's more, we feel even more excited that when looking at the pipeline, we exclude our largest deals from these accounts in order not to be over-reliant on a deal or two, giving us even more confidence in our long-term potential.

Bryan will now review the numbers in more detail, and I'll come back at the end. Bryan?

Bryan Menar: Thank you, Savneet, and good morning, everyone. In Q2, we continued to execute our plan of driving organic growth across our products and the verticals we serve while also driving incremental bottom-line improvement. Subscription services continue to fuel our organic growth and represented 64% of total Q2 revenue. The growth from higher-margin revenue streams resulted in the consolidated non-GAAP gross margin of $59.3 million, an increase of $20.8 million or 54% compared to Q2 prior year. We managed the growth while continuing to drive efficient operating expenses. As a result, we reported a $9.9 million improvement in adjusted EBITDA compared to Q2 prior year. Now to the financial details.

Total revenues were $112 million for Q2 2025, an increase of 44% compared to the same period in 2024, driven by subscription service revenue growth of 60% inclusive of 21% organic growth. Net loss from continuing operations for 2025 was $21 million or $0.52 loss per share, compared to a net loss from continuing operations of $24 million or $0.69 loss per share reported for the same period in 2024. Non-GAAP net income for 2025 was approximately $1 million or $0.03 income per share, a significant improvement compared to a non-GAAP net loss of $8 million or $0.23 loss per share for the prior year.

Adjusted EBITDA for the second quarter of 2025 was $5.5 million, an improvement of $9.9 million compared to the same period in 2024. Sequentially, adjusted EBITDA improved by $1 million in 2025. Q2 adjusted EBITDA of $5.5 million included $450,000 of accounting charges for non-period deferred contract costs. Removing these non-period charges, adjusted EBITDA would have been $6 million. Now for more details on revenue. Subscription service revenue was reported at $72 million, an increase of $27 million or 60% from the $45 million reported in the prior year and now represents 64% of total PAR revenue. Organic subscription service revenue grew 21% compared to the prior year, when excluding revenue from our trailing twelve-month acquisitions.

ARR exiting the quarter was $287 million, an increase of 49% from last year's Q2, with Engagement Cloud up 55% and 42%. Total organic ARR was up 16% year over year. Hardware revenue in the quarter was $27 million, an increase of $7 million or 34% from the $20 million reported in the prior year. The increase was primarily driven by continued penetration of hardware attachment into our expanding software customer base. Professional service revenue was reported at $13.6 million, relatively unchanged from the $13.2 million reported in the prior year. Now turning to margins. Gross margin was $51 million, an increase of $19 million or 59% from the $32 million reported in the prior year.

The increase was driven by subscription services with gross margin dollars of $40 million, an increase of $16 million or 67% from the $24 million reported in the prior year. GAAP subscription service margin for the quarter was 55.3%, compared to 53.1% reported in Q2 of the prior year. Excluding the amortization of intangible assets, stock-based compensation, and severance, total non-GAAP subscription services margin for Q2 2025 was 66.4%, consistent with the 66.4% for Q2 2024. Sequentially, the margin decreased from Q1's margin of 69% was primarily driven to favorable Q1 adjustments and Q2 product mix. We expect adjusted subscription service margin baseline to be between 66-67% for 2025.

Hardware margin for the quarter was 27.3% versus 22.8% in the prior year. The improvement in margin year over year was substantially driven by favorable product mix, as well as year-over-year reduction in expense as we aligned our hardware-related workforce with organizational priorities. We continue to monitor the uncertainties in light of continuing changes to global tariff policies, which may have adverse effects on our hardware revenue and hardware gross margin. We are continuing to evaluate and implement mitigating actions, including potential supply chain resiliency movements and cost or pricing measures, if needed, as the tariff environment evolves. Professional service margin for the quarter was 28.7%, compared to 27.5% reported in the prior year.

The increase primarily consists of margin improvement from field operations and repair services, substantially driven by improved cost management and reduction in third-party spending. In regard to operating expenses, GAAP sales and marketing was $12 million, an increase of $2 million from the $10 million reported in the prior year. The increase was primarily driven by inorganic increases related to our acquisitions, while organic sales and marketing expenses increased $600,000 year over year. GAAP G&A was $32 million, an increase of $6 million from the $25 million reported in the prior year.

The increase was once again primarily driven by inorganic increases, while organic G&A expenses increased by $1.5 million year over year, primarily due to certain non-cash or non-recurring expenses, of which $1.1 million are non-GAAP adjustments. GAAP R&D was $21 million, an increase of $5 million from $16 million recorded in the prior year. The increase was primarily driven by inorganic expenses, while organic R&D expenses increased $2.1 million year over year. Operating expenses, excluding non-GAAP adjustments, were $54 million, an increase of $11 million or 20% versus Q2 2024. But when excluding inorganic growth, operating expenses only increased $2.4 million or 6%. The organic increases were primarily driven by a continued investment in R&D expense.

Exiting Q2, non-GAAP OpEx as a percent of total revenue was 47.9%, a 680 basis point improvement from 54.7% in Q2 of the prior year. As we continue to scale efficiently and demonstrate strong operating leverage. Now to provide information on the company's cash flow and balance sheet position. As of June 30, 2025, we had cash and cash equivalents of $85 million and short-term investments of $600,000. For the six months ended June 30, cash used in operating activities from continuing operations was $24 million versus $33 million for the prior year. Q2 cash used in operating activities of $6.6 million improved noticeably from Q1.

We expect operating cash flow to continue to improve back to positive for the remainder of the year as we continue to drive incremental profitability and reduce our net working capital needs. Cash used in investing activities was $8 million for the six months ended June 30 versus $73 million for the prior year. Investing activities included $4 million of net cash consideration in connection with the tuck-in asset acquisition of GoSkip and capital expenditures of $2 million for developed technology costs associated with our software platforms. Cash provided by financing activities was $11 million for the six months ended June 30 versus $192 million for the prior year.

Financing activities primarily consisted of the net proceeds from the 2030 notes of $111 million, of which $94 million was utilized to repay the credit facility in full. As noted in our performance and remarks, we are pleased with the team's ability to continue to drive meaningful organic growth and incremental profitability while also making the appropriate investments for sustained growth as we move forward with the next phase of our transformation. Our focus on delivering best-of-breed products that truly provide exponential value when bundled together has allowed us to continue to build a healthy pipeline with both multiproduct opportunities as well as accelerated cross-sell penetration.

I will now turn the call back over to Savneet for closing remarks prior to moving to Q&A.

Savneet Singh: As we wrap up this morning, I want to talk about PAR Technology Corporation's trajectory for the balance of the year. Our most significant growth potential continues to be in POS. It remains critical to restaurant operations, it's one of our highest ARPU products, has incredibly sticky retention, and is our best pathway for cross-selling. Despite this opportunity, the POS business is progressing slower than we initially forecasted for Q2 2025. This delay impacts short-term revenue opportunities in POS and payments. Our roommates remain very high, but deal rollouts have been slower, deal signings of larger deals delayed, not lost.

Critically, while macroeconomic pressures can impact the timing of adoption, they do not change the eventual need for the tech upgrades. Given major recent changes in restaurant software, legacy systems do not have the capacity to run AI-driven tools, and in the battle for efficiency, the tech-forward concepts will always win the day. Said differently, the revenue will come just a little slower than expected. And as I mentioned, our signed but not yet fully rolled out POS deals are worth over $20 million on their own today. These deals are already won, not in the pipeline. We remain highly confident in our long-term growth prospects.

With the strongest sales pipeline we've seen in the past five years, and the combination of ParPOS and task ensuring we have the largest POS TAM than we've ever had. Currently, we have active advanced stage discussions with three top 20 restaurant brands, two of whom are global top 10 brands. Securing any one of these would significantly accelerate our growth trajectory alongside the $50 million operator cost pipeline I mentioned earlier. Even aside from these major POS opportunities, our business maintains a steady and reliable growth rate exceeding 15%. In short, just one or two tier one POS deals will provide accelerated growth off that base for years to come.

Alongside the many multiproduct rollouts we have planned for later this year in 2026. So while we continue to target 20% growth in organic ARR as our North in everything we do, we expect this year to end in the mid-teens, driven by the slower POS and payment rollouts we've seen in the first half of this year. While the second half looks very strong, and Burger King is rolling out as planned, following the June ramp-up, the slower first half will make this target harder to achieve. There are certainly plenty of opportunities for us to call back to our goal for the year, but we want to be prudent in setting expectations.

I wanted to close the call on a personal note. I've now been the CEO of PAR Technology Corporation for over six and a half years. I take tremendous pride in what we've accomplished, but also believe we are only as good as the future value we can create today. I know many of you have built a financial position in PAR, have also taken a personal bet on me and our leadership team. We are reminded of this every day and are driven to deliver by the belief you have in us. We do not take this lightly. Part of this is a representation of myself and the team I represent.

I take the responsibility as a pillar of not only my career but my life. Our culture is one of relentless accountability, urgency, and ownership. We treat your capital like it's our own. We know that every dollar we spend is yours, not ours, and never forget that. Above all, we believe there is one metric and one metric alone that matters: shareholder return over the long run. And we never lose sight of that responsibility. We are a company built on the idea that nothing is given and everything is earned. We do not make decisions driven by quarterly results and always consider long-term value.

Whether that's price increases, accelerating go-lives when you're leaving a multiproduct angle on the table, or instituting taxes on third-party systems. There are ultimately always levers we choose not to pursue or pull because we do not believe in the trade-off. The long-term must always win. We want to continue to partner with investors that believe in our long-term story and strategy. This is one of great and seeing around corners. One of converting a legacy hardware business burning cash into a profitable enterprise software platform with a deep moat and flywheel.

We did this by biding our time for the right opportunities, striking when the window was right in the M&A market, and building products with a long-term payoff perspective. There's a reason PAR Technology Corporation is not focused on consolidating legacy companies focused on profit versus growth. It does not sync with our formula of best in class and better together. So let me be clear. Our foundation is strong. And our future path is certain. Whether by contracted future rollouts or late-stage tier one pipeline, the future is bright. A game isn't decided by where it stands at halftime.

And we have a proven team of intense competitors at PAR that are geared up to maximize long-term value for shareholders. We treat this opportunity as it's the one that will define our legacy. That mindset has driven us for the last six and a half years, and it will power us forward. Thank you for taking that on PAR. We intend to continually prove you right. Operator, please open the line for questions.

Operator: Thank you. As a reminder, if you would like to ask a question, please press 11 on your telephone. You will then hear an automated message advising your hand is raised. We ask that you please limit yourself to two questions. Also, please wait for your name and company to be announced before proceeding with that question. One moment, please, while we compile the Q&A roster. The first question today is going to come from Mayank Tandon of Needham. Your line is open.

Mayank Tandon: Thank you. Good morning, Savneet, Bryan, and Christopher. Wanted to start, Savneet, with some of the comments you made towards the end of the call regarding the growth ramp. So just to be clear, given the BK rollout timing, it's nice to hear that it's back on track. And some of the deals that are now go-live, should we still expect subscription growth to reaccelerate from the first half? So any directional guidance you can provide on that would be helpful. And also, any comments around what we should think about on the services and the hardware side just so we have our models in a good spot.

Bryan Menar: Sure. Mayank, this is Bryan. Thanks for the question. I'll take that first, then, Savneet, you can finish it up. But in regards to the acceleration, yes. Like when we talk about year-over-year growth and what Savneet was talking about at the end of the script there, is because of Q1 and Q2 slowing down because of the rollouts, we have that ripple effect as you go through Q3 and Q4 because it's still in your metric. Year-over-year growth is actually a lagging indicator. Incrementally, right? If you go from quarter to quarter, we're expecting now we're seeing accelerated growth incrementally from Q3 into Q4. Hopefully, that answers your question there.

I'll let Savneet answer your questions on the services and hardware.

Savneet Singh: Yeah. So the back half looks very strong. It's more about, you know, we're starting from a lower ARR base than we expected. So getting 20% will be a little bit harder. But there are a lot of levers to do that. I just want to be prudent in setting expectations. And as you heard, you know, we've got a ton of contracted revenue that just needs to get rolled out, and so it's more about, you know, when that hits and the timing of that. On the hardware side, you know, we had a spike in Q2. You know, we think we assume driven by the uncertainty around tariffs and some people pulling ahead.

And so I expect hardware to come down in Q3 to some more traditional levels. Same in Q4. I don't, you know, if there's more aggressive tariff talk, you'll see it spike again because I think our customers clearly want to get ahead of it. But right now, I think we're at a point where there seems to be some stability in the buying cycle there. And on the services side, you know, I think it'll be consistent, you know, you'll see some pickup just because we do have, as Bryan mentioned, incremental revenue growth is, you know, dollar revenue growth in the second half of the year is much larger than the first half of the year.

So you have more installs, you know, more PS type work on that side.

Mayank Tandon: Got it. That's helpful. And then as my follow-up, Savneet, again, great to hear about the multiproduct wins, the record number there. Could you maybe give us any thoughts around what are the scope and size of these deals relative to those single product deals? In other words, what is the ARPU uplift that you can typically capture from these types of wins?

Savneet Singh: It's a great question. So when they come from the operator cloud, and I'll give you the average at the end, when they come from the operator cloud, you know, usually taking a POS deal that's anywhere from, you know, $2,400 to $3,000 a year, and you're adding another $1,600 of it is, you know, call it a, you know, we had an example of a small chain we signed in Q1, about 100 stores. Normally, 100 stores picking us for POS will be, you know, call it, you know, ARPU per store of around $2,500. You know, this client will be, you know, a $7 or $800,000 a year, right?

So paying us $7 or $8,000 because they took the full product suite. And so it has a meaningful impact. You know, that hasn't flown through our P&L yet. You know, this has been a very new trend for us. On the engagement cloud, you know, it's a little bit smaller. The average loyalty customer is, you know, call it, from $80 to $100 a month, sometimes, you know, a little bit bigger than that and growing, obviously. And when they add ordering, it's around the same, depending on which modules they pick. So, you know, it's a doubling on that side. So it is a really, really meaningful impact to the P&L.

And, again, something we're looking forward to, you know, having flow into the P&L at the end of this year and next year.

Mayank Tandon: That's great. Thank you so much.

Operator: Thank you. One moment for the next question. And the next question will come from the line of Stephen Sheldon of William Blair. Your line is open.

Stephen Sheldon: Hey. Thanks. So, Savneet, you mentioned two mega tier one deals that you're currently pursuing in the operator cloud. I know there are probably limitations on what you can say, but any more context on those, you know, when decisions are potentially going to get made and what PAR solutions those brands might be considering, you know, is POS on the table for those considerations?

Savneet Singh: Yeah. They are POS deals. You know, like I said, three top 20 brands, two top 10 brands. All POS related and, you know, at least one of them we hope to be multiproduct, maybe two. But, and so it's all POS driven. You know, timing, you know, on two of them, expect in 2025. You know, one of them will be, you know, I'm expecting '26. The customer will say '25. So, you know, they are big. But, you know, the bigger point I think what we're making here is that by adding tasks to the PAR platform, you know, we're now able to do these global deals that really are impacting our pipeline.

And so, you know, we stopped, you know, we've offensively stopped most task rollouts for this year. Again, muting our growth a bit. For reinvesting aggressively in the task platform to, you know, not only have these deals but have more of these global brands. That historically we've not been able to participate in. So short answer is, Q2 2025, for two. 2026 for one is our guess. And all POS.

Bryan Menar: And I just want to add one thing, Stephen, to that. Just want to make sure from the remarks that we had in the script too, the amounts that we're talking about pipeline in there excluded these because we didn't want to kind of distort what we're talking about here. So we have a healthy pipeline across our products, across the verticals we're serving. And these are other additional actual jobs that are actually our focus for the long-term strategic growth.

Stephen Sheldon: Got it. Yeah. That's helpful. And then just looking at the active sites between operator and engagement, it seemed like both were maybe down just a touch sequentially. I mean, any context on that? What drove that?

Savneet Singh: Yeah. Absolutely. So on the engagement side, you'll see a nice pickup in Q3. We're signing deals, and so we start collecting revenue, but they haven't gone live yet. So it's just a timing issue on the engagement side. You know, I said the engagement side had, you know, really, really strong ARR growth. And so you'll see the results flow into the next queue. So I'm super excited there. We had some smaller churn there that candidly was needed churn. You know, nothing, you know, historical rates, nothing different than historical rates. And, obviously, stuff that we think was good churn for us.

On the operator cloud side, it's just, you know, second half of the year, the sites get really rolling.

Bryan Menar: Yep. The first half was it was really due to the rollouts being delayed that caused that issue. In regards to what we saw for growth rates year over year.

Operator: Okay. Thank you. Thank you. One moment for the next question. And the next question is coming from the line of Andrew Harte of BTIG. Your line is open.

Andrew Harte: Hi. Thanks for the question. Savneet, really appreciate the comments on Better Together. It sounds like the multiproduct sales cycle really starts with POS. But, I guess, can you talk about what are the most common add-ons? I think something you talked about in your prepared remarks was ParOps having really great momentum. Do you see that as cross-sell or an upsell or net new? Just help us understand the sales cycle starting with POS and then what you go with from there.

Savneet Singh: That's a great question. So, generally, on the operator cloud side, you know, you're attaching payments in back office. Obviously, a lot of my commentary on the excitement of ParOps is because we sort of figured that bundle out really well. And it's always product-related. You know? Once we deliver product functionality, we're able to sort of build that pipeline up. So it's usually, you know, you're attaching one of those to their. On the engagement side, it's really PAR ordering. It's attaching our online ordering product, which is now, you know, we really best in class and going to start taking real share. And so on that side, it's PAR ordering.

What I think is going to be more exciting, you know, in the coming years will be, you know, adding product three, four, five, and six. You know, that's what's next, and we're gearing up for that.

Andrew Harte: Thanks. And then would love to hear your thoughts on the online ordering space, especially with the Olo deal announced a couple of months ago. It feels like PAR has a great opportunity to effectively compete in online ordering with menu as an upsell as you just kind of talked about. So would love to hear your thoughts on the online ordering space. And then maybe just continued appetite to probably do M&A. It sounds like there was, you know, another tuck-in this quarter as well. Thanks.

Savneet Singh: So, yeah, absolutely. I mean, PAR ordering has been an incredible bright spot for the year. Our ability to, our velocity of product is incredible there. We're shipping almost every few weeks. The confidence we have in being best in class there is just super high. What's been fun is that, you know, we've done this, you know, in Stealth of Knight with a small team, and now the results and the wins are there. And so, you know, we have we won six logos this quarter. Think we're going to have some great wins in Q3 and in Q4. And, you know, for the first time, we feel we're ready to go and start poaching the big guys.

So PAR ordering is in a really strong you can see just from the numbers of wins where, you know, the deals are winning. And what's what gives us a huge advantage here is that the integration of PAR ordering within loyalty in particular, but also within POS and other parts of PAR, gives us an advantage that we don't believe anybody can compete with. And so that scale where we have the largest loyalty business in the industry, and attaching ordering to that, you know, it is a better product. And so we expect, you know, a lot more to happen here. Now we're early, but we feel pretty good about it.

The other thing I'd sort of add there is I mentioned this in the script, but the growth in PAR ordering is also pulling in future payments revenue. And so that will be another lever that we think we'll get to later this year. And that's a very, very juicy revenue stream. So yeah, I think we feel really good. You know, the fact that we're releasing every quarter now the number of wins, we expect to have a bunch of new press releases coming out with wins in the second half of the year. And these are logos you'll recognize.

Bryan Menar: And then, Andrew, just, I think, in your reference, just make sure I clear up for you on the tuck-in acquisition. It was GoSkip, the reference to cash flow section, which was a tuck-in at the end of Q1. And that is in our retail vertical.

Andrew Harte: Thanks, guys. I appreciate the color.

Operator: Thank you. One moment for the next question. And the next question will be coming from the line of Will Gantt of Goldman Sachs. Your line is open.

Will Gantt: Hey, guys. Good morning. Thank you for taking the questions. I wanted to come back to the ARR growth. Heard you on where you're expecting to end the year as of some of the pushouts. But it sounds like on an incremental basis, you are expecting some acceleration. And so I was just wondering if you could kind of go through the puts and takes, Burger King restarting, something's getting pushed out. You know, what does it take, or what's the line of sight? Do you have a sense for when we could see ARR growth kind of back in that 20% range?

Like, do we need to lap the 2025 with this going a little bit slower to kind of see the full acceleration, or could we see it sooner?

Savneet Singh: Yeah. The earliest you'd see it is Q4, but I think it'll be a little bit after that. That's why I made the comments, although there's a lot of good stuff happening. It's as you can see, the quarter to quarter is a little hard for us to forecast. The puts and takes are pretty simple. Burger King's going great. But, you know, from the baseline of ARR we're at now, you know, we're as we're even though we're going to add a bunch of ARR, you know, probably what we hope to add because it's starting at a lower base, the comparison will look lower.

And so this is more about rollouts we had planned that over $20 million of contract revenue going a little bit slower than we expected, and I think very much tied to the macroeconomic uncertainty where we saw people say, hey, let's push out the rollout a month or two. So still contracted. Still guaranteed to pay PAR with a contract. But we need, you know, those deals to continue to accelerate. And so I think that's been the main, you know, headwind, if you will. The other one is our decision, which is purposeful, to not take task revenue live and focus on these global tier one deals.

You know, that was, you know, a nice chunk of revenue that we, you know, could have taken on. You know, as I mentioned at the end of the script, like, we could have done on a very short-term basis, but we decided to make that ROI there, make the right we think the right thing so we can hopefully win one of these global tier one deals. And the last one I mentioned is that the multiproduct deals that we do, they do slow down the single product sale. And we've continued to make the decision, which is the multiproduct is so powerful. The economics are so much better for our shareholders that we'll always do that.

And so we'll get faster and faster at that, but they do slow down stuff a little bit. Now to the part of, like, what could get us there, the rollout accelerations absolutely can come through, and we've seen those turn on a dime in the past, but we want to be careful. But those can absolutely come through. Number two is, you know, delegate and the ParOps having a strong end of the year because delegate becomes organic by the end of the year. And I think the third thing is the winning of these any one of these larger deals that are in the pipeline, you know, we would hope to start, you know, billing in Q2 2025.

And so there are a number of levers that can get us there. But we want to be, you know, careful in not getting ahead of ourselves. So still shooting for it, but I wanted to be, you know, transparent of sort of like, hey, the first half because of the POS side, became a little bit slower. And so we want to be, you know, careful.

Bryan Menar: And what I'll just add to that, Savneet's right in everything we just talked about there in regards from a perspective. And I think, Will, what you're referencing is just also the pure math of it, and you're right. When you're lapping in Q1 and Q2 of next year, and over what happened in the first half of this year, the math goes in your favor at that point in time as well on top of what Savneet just laid out for you.

Will Gantt: Got it. No. That's very clear. And if I could just follow-up on the task side, you know, at the risk of asking a potentially dumb question, like, why can't you do both on this? So it seems like you're delaying kind of implementations for some clients already signed to focus on, like, go-to-market and people that are not signed. So what's sort of the connection there, and, like, why is it you can't implement some of the book while you're going after, you know, some of these newer opportunities?

Savneet Singh: It's primarily dev capacity. Right? When you're implementing a new deal, you're configuring. There's a ton of work upfront. And so, when you're winning, you know, a tier one deal, you're doing a bunch of work in advance to win that deal. You're setting up the menus, the labs, configuring, you know, the back end. And so it's a small team, and, you know, we've made the decision to have those really tough conversations with customers and make those investments to the product. And so it's just about scaling up the team so that we can do both. You know, to be honest, we didn't expect this to happen so fast. That's really the thing here.

It's a wonderful problem, I guess. Which is we didn't think this has come so quickly on these global deals. And as a result, didn't have the team ready to do that. So we're, you know, we're adding, you know, more expense to grow that team, and then we just need to get the existing team to get, you know, hopefully crack one of the tier one deals. And then we'll go back and take that revenue live. I do think we'll still win the we'll still be able to roll out those deals. But we can't do both right now with the size of the team we have.

Will Gantt: Okay. No. That's clear. I appreciate it. And at the risk of I'll take the liberty of maybe asking a quick one here. Are these like, in-house to out-of-house conversions, or are these, like, competitive situations? I'm not sure they're competitive RFPs, but are they using existing vendor, or are these, you know, a of the industry got in-house technology?

Savneet Singh: There everyone is on some legacy product primarily. There are, you know, there is certainly, you know, in our tier one pipeline, there are certainly, you know, in-house technology being used. But I want to be careful what I say then.

Will Gantt: Okay. Understood. Thanks for taking the question.

Operator: Thank you. One moment for the next question. And the next question will be coming from the line of Samad Samana of Jefferies. Your line is open.

Samad Samana: Hi. Good morning. Thanks for taking my questions. Maybe first, just stepping back, Savneet, like, as you mentioned macro a couple of times, and you'd mentioned payments was maybe a little bit lower. Was that more related to what you've seen out of maybe some of the QSRs talking about, like, cross currents, and is that what impacted payments, or is there something else that we need to know about there? And then I have a follow-up question as well.

Savneet Singh: It's two things, really. So one is POS going slower impacts payments because they're, you know, usually bundled together. So that's the big driver there. And the second is the point you mentioned, which is there's definitely a slowdown in sort of QSR. And so, that's the second part. But the first part is the more important for the first half so far.

Samad Samana: Understood. And then if you think about the, like, the record, how $100 million pipeline, obviously, it's very impressive. You guys are also bigger than ever. You have more product than ever. So is there a way to both weight that maybe relative to what you would have offered historically? Obviously, $100 million, again, is a big number. And then maybe related to that, of that $100 million, what like, what would you look at the maybe, like, the twelve-month horizon looking like in terms of converting that from pipeline to bookings or revenue?

Savneet Singh: Yeah. So let's say a few ways. So well, first thing, which is the pipeline doesn't include what's already contracts rolled out. So as I mentioned, on the POS side alone, there's $20 million that needs to be rolled out. That's contracted already. I don't have it off hand, but there'll be, you know, big numbers for loyalty, retails on and so forth. So you've got a lot of coverage just from what's already contracted out. Generally, when we look at the pipeline, you're looking at what you can sign within the next twelve months, and you're weighting it down over there. So it is a, you know, it is a conservative UR pipeline. Already.

Because we want to make sure that, you know, they're there. So from a pipeline coverage perspective, it's not only the pipeline larger than it's ever been, from a pipeline coverage perspective, i.e., coverage to hit your growth rates, it's also higher than we've had historically in the past. And the last thing, you know, Bryan mentioned this, we've removed these sort of mega tier one deals just because they make the pipeline look, you know, almost too big. And so, you know, you've got that also as a nice tailwind.

Samad Samana: Great. Appreciate the time as always. Thank you.

Operator: Thank you. As a reminder, if you would like to ask a question, please press 11 on your telephone. One moment for the next question. Our next question will come from the line of Charles Nabhan of Stephens. Your line is open.

Charles Nabhan: Good morning, and thank you for taking my question. Wanted to double-click on your comments around the gross margin. I know some of the sequential decrease is due to some non-recurring benefits in the first quarter. But as we think about that range of $66 million to $60 million in the back half of the year and beyond, can you maybe talk about the puts and the takes, whether we could expect the fourth quarter to be maybe a little higher, how we should think about '26 as well as the impact of payments and menu, which have historically been diluted to subscription gross margin?

Bryan Menar: Sure. Yeah. I'll take this one. This is Bryan. Thanks for the question. You're correct. Right? Part of the '69 and then sequential down, we maybe referenced this, I think, in the Q1 call, right, about one at least 1% of that, a 100 basis points was due to some favorability one-timers in Q1, Central at 68. And then the remainder of the majority is actually product mix of where the actual growth came from both ARR and subscription services revenue. In Q2. That mix is not going to change noticeably in Q3 and Q4.

That's why the range that was given for Q2 and Q4 but our longer-term goal of getting it back up closer to 70% is still out there. Right? It's just that baseline where we're at right now with the mix is going to be tough to get there. So that's why we want to manage your expectation there for both Q3 and Q4.

Charles Nabhan: Okay. And as a follow-up, I wanted to get your perspective on AI. First, there's a disruptive force for the industry, and then secondly, as an opportunity, not just externally, as a means of as an opportunity to enhance your product set and your value proposition to customers, but also as a means of improving your internal efficiency. So any perspective on that, I think, would be helpful.

Savneet Singh: Absolutely. I mean, I think if you'd asked anybody any employee at PAR, you know, PAR is all in on AI. You know, I think lots of people say that. I think we have focused on being execution-oriented there. So instead of sort of process about how amazing AI is going to be, you know, we really break it down into projects. And what we can deliver. Every department leader at PAR has to deliver a plan on AI and what is an AI-first version of their organization look like. And then working backwards, how do we get there from where we are today? So we're seeing, you know, meaningful success right now.

In two areas, which would be on the development side, our development efficiency, our ability to not increase development headcount, while still shipping more product than ever before is crystal clear. Whether you measure it in story points, whether you measure it as commit, you know, you're seeing tremendous, tremendous acceleration of velocity over there, and we are still not even halfway through what we want to get done on that side. The other part of the world we're seeing that is on support where not only are we using, you know, tooling to make our teams better to understand types of calls, call volume.

We're also building on our agents so that we can start answering in a more automated fashion. And we're there. What's amazing about that, though, has also become an amazing tool for our internal team. So our sales teams no longer need to figure out a complex configuration or track down a hardware piece. It's all done through an internal AI part agent. So those are two big areas we see meaningful ability to control cost. You can that cost. Where you'll see it going forward, I think the more important part of AI for us will be delivery to our customers. You know, at PAR, AI is built in. It's not bolted on.

You know, we're building it natively within our products because we control the workflow. I think having the workflow is going to matter because we've got proprietary data. You're already in our products. So our ability to connect your restaurant and your systems through AI is far better than somebody coming in from the outside. And so I think we have an incredible advantage that we are looking to take advantage of. I mentioned on the call, one of our first products coming out later this quarter, it's called CoachAI, and it's a great example of using AI to pull data across the POS, the back office, the drive-through to give actionable insights to the operators to, hey, do this.

Cut this. What about this? It's becoming the agent for the store. You know, these are really, really big changes to the operator, and so that's where we're most excited. But and we've started on the internal. Because we believe that, you know, we have to be AI in the internal in order to be the external to our customers.

Charles Nabhan: Got it. Appreciate the color, guys. Thank you.

Operator: Thank you. One moment for the next question. And the next question will come from the line of Eric Martinuzzi of Lake Street. Your line is open.

Eric Martinuzzi: Yep. Just from a macro perspective, been seeing some headlines about lower foot traffic at QSR. Just curious to know if you've seen any lift in the engagement cloud that you could say was kind of tied to that where people are, you know, saying, okay, I've got to pull whatever levers are available to me.

Savneet Singh: Yeah. Absolutely. We're seeing a lot of strength in the engagement side. You know, the in pipeline. So we'll see if that converts. What's been exciting is, you know, the engagement side business has been growing without that. But we certainly see a lot more interest in loyalty. What's critical about that is that it's the loyalty engagements we have today it's not about, okay, let me go send a bunch of discounts to get you to come back in the store. It's about building these personal connections.

And why I love that is that it actually ingrains the loyalty in the workflow of the customer, the customer being you and I as a customer of that restaurant versus, you know, us always selling tools to the internal. And why that's why it's powerful that then you can then connect in PAR ordering, PAR wallets, and do so much more. So the simple answer is absolutely. There's a lot more demand for engagement in a world where there is absolutely a lot of volatility in the short-term volatility from the in the QSR and fast-casual space.

But I think the long-term trend here is going to continue because the value of these loyalty programs in good and bad markets is undeniable.

Eric Martinuzzi: Got it. Thank you.

Operator: Thank you. One moment. And our next question will be coming from the line of George Sutton of Craig Hallum. Your line is open.

George Sutton: Thank you. Savneet, you had mentioned that the point of sale process was slow or sales process was slow. I'm curious how much is that driven by your actual focus on trying to sign multiproduct deals? Obviously, it's kind of a long-term gain for some short-term pain. I'm just curious how significant is that?

Savneet Singh: So it's not significant, but it's, you know, it's 10% or 15%. There's some impact for sure because you're trying to bundle a second product. But I just want to be clear. It's not the sales side. It's the getting the deals rolled out because when we roll out a deal, there's a cap back for the restaurateur, usually the hardware and services. And so that's just been slower than we expected. And then, you know, some of the sales that have been slower. Again, all these deals will come in the door. I think this stuff might be tied to the multiproduct that you mentioned. Or just, you know, hey, macroeconomic uncertainty.

But what I think is most important to get is, you know, it's not that the pipeline is just strong. It's actually the signed deals are there. They just got to get out the door.

Bryan Menar: Yep. And we have seen the acceleration of rollouts happen at the very end of Q in the last month.

George Sutton: Understand. Thanks for the clarity. And, on your online ordering 2.0 thesis relative to 1.0. Can you just talk about the metrics behind that? What you are seeing in terms of any of the improved metrics for the customers?

Savneet Singh: Generally, I think when you bundle, as we've been doing, ordering within some loyalty, you see an increase in a few areas. You see an increase in conversion, which is wildly important as, you know, I'm sure you're like me. There's tons of abandoned carts all over the Internet. You see an increase in basket size, and then you see an increase in long-term customer value. I can come back to you with specifics on that. You know, it's probably too early, right, just because we've had this real sales law for the last, call it, six months. And but that's what's been crazy, crazy exciting. And I'll give you some examples that I think are just really neat.

You know, when you now use these are online ordering products, you know, upfront, you can say, I have these three allergies, and the menu gets updated just to update for you. You know, things like that we could added so much functionality that we just it's going to be hard for anyone to compete with us when you combine that loyalty data within the ordering suite.

George Sutton: Awesome. Thank you.

Operator: Thank you. And the next question will be coming from the line of Adam Wyden of ABW Capital. Please go ahead.

Adam Wyden: Hey. So you talked a little bit about task and two questions on task. One is, you talked about a Q1 2026 rollout per task. And then you also talked about, you know, having to do, I guess, stuff for people in the pipeline. Is that affecting your gross margin? I mean, even if there's not additional G&A or resources, I mean, are you spending additional money that's running through the P&L today in, you know, with the idea that you're going to get this business?

Savneet Singh: Correct. So we've increased investment in task. It's not a singular rollout for task. We had a multimillion-dollar backlog of tasks customers to roll out in Q2 2025. We've pushed most of that to 2026 so that we can build out for these potential global tier one deals that we're chasing. And so the short answer is yes, but I want to be clear. It's not one deal. It's the backlog of deals we've already signed that needs to get out the door.

Adam Wyden: Got it. So you're hosting and piloting and spending, you know, money basically allowing basically, the stuff that's already been signed on task and also the new stuff in the pipeline, you're also spending money in, you know, with the hope that, you know, these guys take it on and they start billing. So that's obviously going to be affecting your gross margin on the task side now.

Savneet Singh: Yeah. I was looking at more at configuration, building integrations, you know, things like that. Not the hosting is absolutely, but it's that other core of R&D work that hits both the COGS line and the R&D line.

Adam Wyden: Okay. And then you said a $100 million not including the super tier one. I mean, is there any way you can try and quantify what that could look like? Would it be a global deal? Would it be a singular market deal? I mean, is there any way you can sort of bracket that? Because I think you know, you said that you would expect to hear two of them in '25 and one in '26. Is there any sort of way you could, you know, attempt to quantify? I mean, obviously, there's a probability element to it. But if in fact you did win one or two of those, how do you think about what those could be?

Savneet Singh: You know, they're very large. I mean, the reason I don't include them in the pipeline is that they sway the pipeline numbers, you know, so significantly that, you know, I don't want the sales team getting lazy thinking we have plenty of coverage. You know, the two of them are global deals. So they are not a, you know, one country deal. They're global deals. And one of them is, you know, call it North America. And so but, you know, these deals would be, you know, up there with our largest or many multiples of our largest customer now.

Adam Wyden: Right. So that's not just a singular market. You would be getting, like, a geography. You'd get, like, in North America or you'd get, you know, the globe for two of these. So these things could be very large. And then, you know, my other question is, you know, obviously, the company has been acquisitive. You know, you're seeing other people, like, DoorDash buy seven rooms and Thoma Bravo buying Olo. I mean, you've been the acquirer of choice and you've done a phenomenal job doing it. But I think, you know, now when I look at the stock where it is right now, I think you're trading at, you know, I don't know, under five times ARR on 2026.

I mean, I have to sort of think about what the '26 ARR is. But, I mean, you're trading at effectively a multiple that's likely lower than anything you're going to buy. I mean, how do you think about, you know, sort of the delta between sort of what I would consider other vertical software companies like a Guidewire or ServiceTitan or an Axon, which has, you know, a hardware and software component. Even something like Agilysys. I mean, how do you think about, you know, sort of doing M&A with your multiple here and, you know, I guess the question is, you know, would you at this point consider being the acquiree?

Because it feels like, you know, the market is not really appreciating, you know, sort of the value of this platform.

Savneet Singh: So, you know, Adam, on the last part, you know, we're up for sale every day. And, you know, there's nothing that would prevent someone from coming into PAR at any time. And if it creates value for shareholders, that we believe beats the long-term value shareholders, I think myself and my board will be super supportive of that. And, you know, we've always said that. You know, we as I said in the script, you know, we are highly aligned to you as a shareholder and care only about driving returns. If that drives a return, it's always there. Nothing will stop that. Does it make it a lot more attractive?

You know, if our multiples are, it surely makes us probably more attractive. But I think what makes us more attractive is our business has never been in a better position from a competitive standpoint, from a market standpoint. So I think that's what, you know, should drive anyone's decision. On your first point, we feel there's plenty of M&A to be done. You know, comparing us to, you know, Guidewire or other major companies, yeah, it obviously pisses me off because I think we've got longer, more growth in prospects in front of us. But I think at the same time, we are our M&A is relative to our category.

And so it's very hard for anyone that we want to acquire to argue that they deserve a higher multiple than PAR. And so, definitely, I think we would set the tone evaluation based off where we are trading. And, sure, there are random things out there that are, you know, out of our range, but that's usually not the stuff that we want or we are chasing. You know, we're looking for blocking and tackling products that we can integrate quickly, build AI on top of. We're not looking for the, you know, Silicon Valley startup that has $500,000 of revenue and half a billion dollars of price. You know, we're looking for pure enterprise software.

And so to me, you know, valuation is a relative game to the category you're looking to acquire. And in our category, we still feel very, really good.

Adam Wyden: Got it. So but, I mean, there's I mean, guess what I would say is, like, for the time being, you know because I think a lot of people on this call, you know, yeah, I know you probably can't comment about party A and all this stuff and proxies and this and that, but I think there was some expectation that, you know, that you guys would look to do transformational M&A as you talked about in the past. And so I think is it fair to assume that, you know, given where your cost of capital is, you know, you're going to be doing primarily tuck-ins and not really big things. I mean, is that sort of fair?

I mean, because, obviously, bigger things are, you know, have higher premiums and whatnot. I mean, is it fair to assume that your focus will be on tuck-in M&A? I mean, because these other things are trading at much higher multiples. I mean, bigger assets trade at bigger multiples. Generally.

Savneet Singh: Yeah. I mean, listen. I think we are not, you know, bidding for Olo. You know, that's, you know, as I mentioned, PAR ordering is doing great. You know, while there's probably incredible synergies between our companies, we feel great where we are and our ability to take share. You know, M&A for us, it's as I've said to you many times, it's not, you know, as programmatic as it sounds. It's very opportunistic. And it's very product set. You know, today, our pipeline is heavy focused on what, you know, what you call tuck-in. I call them, you know, capabilities. That will allow, you know, tremendous cross-sell.

But there are still plenty of large assets that if we can buy them accretively, we would go after it. And, again, bigger assets trade for bigger multiples. But in our category, they're not things that are going to trade higher than us that are generally large because we set that tone on valuation because, hey, if you went, you know, public as an example, you're going to trade lower than we trade because, generally, you know, we're the bigger platform, and we've got well, present better metrics. So, again, it is hard to be precise because, you know, we're fishing in a pool that, you know, we kind of know everybody.

And so I don't think the larger players in our space say, oh, I expect to trade at, you know, a Palantir multiple. They expect to trade multiples that our category trades at. And that's where I feel. So we still feel really good about the M&A pipeline, and I don't think that's going to change. But thank you for the call, Adam, and I'll pass it back to the operator.

Operator: Thank you. This does conclude today's Q&A session. I would like to turn the call back over to Christopher now for closing remarks.

Christopher Byrnes: Thanks, Lisa, and thanks to everyone for joining us today. We look forward to speaking and updating most of you in the coming days and weeks. Thank you, and have a nice day.

Operator: This concludes today's conference call. You all may disconnect.

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