Forrester Research, Inc. (NASDAQ:FORR) Q4 2025 Earnings Call Transcript

Forrester Research, Inc. (NASDAQ:FORR) Q4 2025 Earnings Call Transcript February 12, 2026

Forrester Research, Inc. misses on earnings expectations. Reported EPS is $0.17 EPS, expectations were $0.21.

Operator: Good afternoon, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to Forrester Research, Inc.’s Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2025 Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. After the speakers’ presentation, there will be a question-and-answer session. Please be advised that today’s conference is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Vice President of Corporate Development and Investor Relations, Edward Bryce Morris. Please go ahead. Thank you, and hello, everyone, for joining today’s call.

Edward Bryce Morris: Earlier this afternoon, we issued our press release for the fourth quarter and full year 2025. If you need a copy, you can find one on our website in the Investors section. Here with us today to discuss our results are George F. Colony, Forrester Research, Inc.’s chief executive officer and chairman, and Leo Christian Finn, chief financial officer. Carrie Johnson Fanlo, our chief product officer, and Christophe Favre, our chief sales officer, are also here with us for the Q&A section of the call. Before we begin, I would like to remind you that this call will contain forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Words such as “expects,” “believes,” “anticipates,” “intends,” “plans,” “estimates,” or similar expressions are intended to identify these forward-looking statements.

A close-up of a hand holding a tablet with financial charts and graphs.

These statements are based on the company’s current plans and expectations and involve risks and uncertainties that could cause future activities and results of operations to be materially different from those set forth in the forward-looking statements. Factors that could cause actual results to differ are discussed in our reports and filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, and the company undertakes no obligation to publicly update any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events, or otherwise. Lastly, consistent with our previous calls, today, we are discussing our performance on an adjusted basis, which excludes items affecting comparability. While reporting on an adjusted basis is not in accordance with GAAP, we believe that reporting numbers on this adjusted basis provides a meaningful comparison and an appropriate basis for our discussion.

You can find a detailed list of items excluded from these adjusted results in our press release. And with that, I will hand it over to George. Good afternoon, and welcome to Forrester Research, Inc.’s Q4 2025 and Full Year Earnings Call. I am joined by our chief financial officer, Leo Christian Finn, who will provide a detailed financial update after my remarks. I will be covering the following key themes today. One, the progress we made in 2025; two, our financial performance in Q4 and 2025; three, our focus areas for 2026. As I look back at 2025, it is now clear that our clients are operating under a new paradigm, shaped by AI. Large companies are confronted with complex buying decisions, disconnected CX journeys, and quickly changing customer behavior.

At the same time, they are dealing with new technology challenges,

Q&A Session

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George F. Colony: how to implement and scale generative AI, how to ensure safe data usage with AgenTeq AI, and how to maximize IT investments amidst a changing buying landscape. Complexity is growing. Forrester Research, Inc. is uniquely positioned to help large companies navigate these problems. As I have talked about on recent investor calls, we have strongly pivoted over the last three years to align our research with the AI changes, to build the AI technology for our clients, and to leverage AI technology to help us create research in new ways. Simply stated, we are guiding our clients to seize the AI opportunity to win, serve, and retain their customers and to navigate the new risk landscape. True to our long-held positioning, we are researching at the intersection of business and technology, where the battle for customers in the age of AI will be waged.

Last week, we saw a disruption in equity markets as investors feared that AI would destroy the software industry. Will it? No. But it will spawn a new technology, what we call AI computing, that will rival and, in some cases, replace the old SaaS model. It is these types of market evolutions that Forrester Research, Inc. was built to analyze and research. And the more disruption, the faster our business model will grow. And we are evolving that business model. Forrester Research, Inc. has been actively embracing AI for three and a half years, and we have offered iZola, our generative model, to clients for two and a half years. We have two development teams devoted to building our AI capabilities, and we have years of experience working with the technology and testing and learning with our clients.

In 2025, we launched a product based on AI, AI Access. In Q4, unique users of Forrester AI were up 55% year over year. The number of prompts was up 65% year over year. AI increases the value of our research, making it more accessible to clients and enabling them to create new and original content, like a board of directors deck, from Forrester Research, Inc.’s data and models. Having one research platform, Forrester Decisions, has given us an advantage, streamlining our AI efforts and optimizing our client experience. Companies want their executives to be using AI in their daily work

Edward Bryce Morris: and this

George F. Colony: increased the attractiveness of our AI products. Before I leave an overview of 2025, I wanted to reiterate the go-forward value of Forrester Research, Inc. in the AI era. We have three capabilities that public large language models cannot deliver. One, proprietary data. Two, original ideas and analysis. And three, the ability of our clients to talk to the people that created the data and ideas, and how they can be applied to the specific environments of our clients. Floating over all of this is a big word: trust. When executives work with Forrester Research, Inc., they know they are turning to trusted sources backed by human experts. Turning now to our financial performance, and in the full year. While the future holds great promise for Forrester Research, Inc., we continue to work through challenges in Q4.

In Q4, CV declined 6%, while revenue declined by 7% year over year. CV and revenue declines showed improvement compared with the previous quarter. Full year revenue in 2025 declined by 8% as our research business was impacted by the final leg of our migration to Forrester Decisions. Consulting and events revenue were down 9% and 29%, respectively. We are repositioning these businesses in 2026, as I will cover in a few moments. 2025 free cash flow was $18,000,000, while retention reached 87%, up a point from the start of 2025. Client retention was up three points in Q4, and up four points from the start of 2025, reflecting the positive impact of our new AI Access

Edward Bryce Morris: product.

George F. Colony: Client count increased in Q4 as well, our first quarterly increase in this metric since 2021. Our ability to offer a broader portfolio of products is helping drive up client count. Additionally, the percentage of CV in multiyear deals increased, with 72% of CV made up of multiyear deals at year end, up from 69% in 2024. Finally, our new AI Access product is generating new business and showing positive forward momentum. Released in September, AI Access had over $5,000,000 in bookings for 2025, and will be a strong area of focus for us going forward. I would now like to turn to 2026. Our plan is to return to CV growth in the year as we focus on four initiatives. One, consistent execution of our retention life cycle.

Operator: Introduction of more product options, including embedded Forrester AI. Three, a culture of growth within sales and improvements to our go-to-market execution. And finally, four, actionable all-seasons research and the production of more data. In 2024, we introduced the retention life cycle, a standard process for periodically checking in with the economic buyer of our research to ensure that we are delivering value to our customers. In September, we hired Julie Marringer, a former Forrester Research, Inc. executive, to run customer success at the company. She is bringing more accountability, discipline, and rigor to the life cycle process. Our data shows a double-digit improvement in seat-holder retention when we execute the steps in the life cycle.

The data is clear. Julie and team are leading consistent execution which will reduce client churn and down-sell. Our second initiative is on the product front. We will do two things. One, introduce more product options to fill out the portfolio; and two, expand the capabilities of Forrester AI. In 2026, we will be adding new versions of Forrester Decisions built to enable teams of executives to work more closely together and complete corporate initiatives faster. And we will be expanding the capabilities of Forrester AI to enhance the conversational capabilities of the model and embed it within our clients’ systems. As part of this effort, we are changing the name of our flagship AI tool, iZola, to Forrester AI. This evolution reflects Forrester AI’s broad range and use cases, as we expand beyond question-and-answer applications, including future integrations into third-party workflows.

Our third initiative is to continue to improve our go-to-market systems and talent. This will be led by our new chief sales officer, Christophe Favre. Christophe has been at Forrester Research, Inc. for over fourteen years. Early in his Forrester Research, Inc. career, Christophe managed our international business development team, the third-party reps who sell in countries where we do not have

Edward Bryce Morris: presence.

Operator: In 2016, Christophe moved from Europe to Singapore. He ran Forrester Research, Inc. sales in Asia Pacific, including India. During his time there, he tripled the size of our business in that region. In 2021, he relocated to London, where he assumed management of all of Forrester Research, Inc.’s business in APAC, and also in EMEA. Over the last three years, sales regions have showed the best performance of the company, and the highest net contract value increase. Christophe’s plan is to create a culture of growth in sales and to sharpen sales execution. Christophe and I have spent a lot of time over the last decade selling to prospects and clients. I have high confidence in his ability to move our sales force back into growth.

The fourth initiative of 2026 is to create research that is actionable, relevant in different business cycles, and yields more data. Our clients use Forrester Research, Inc.’s research to make decisions and to take action. Our new initiative, Blueprints, gives step-by-step guidance on how to tackle key efforts that span weeks, months, and quarters, with reports, templates, tools, and guidance sessions plotting the best path. We will increase the volume of actionable research in 2026. The second effort is what we call research for all seasons. Forrester Decisions is often used to make corporate transformations go faster and to improve their chances of success. Our challenge is ensuring that our research has increased value between transformations when companies are not in change mode.

To this end, we will be creating more content to help our clients improve their personal and professional effectiveness, and to solve everyday problems that may be unconnected to broader projects. Finally, we will be investing in additional proprietary data. This will include adding new layers of B2B buyer insights and expanding the Total Experience Index. On February 9, we announced a restructuring affecting 8% of our employees. We made this move to align cost with revenue and to focus the company on expanding research contract value. As part of this effort, we are exiting the strategy consulting business. This business has been negatively affected by the ongoing instability of U.S. federal contracts and an increasingly competitive market.

Our consulting business will now consist of advisory work—our analysts doing day-long engagements with clients—and our content marketing business, the custom Total Economic Impact and Market Impact reports that we produce for clients. We will continue to offer these three products as they have shown proven impact on driving NCVI. The ongoing instability of our events portfolio prompted us to make significant changes in that business. We have heard from event attendees that travel budgets have tightened, and leaders often do not have the time to commit to three- and four-day events. Accordingly, we are moving away from longer, multi-day events that require substantial travel for our clients, and we are shifting toward shorter, more intimate forums held closer to where our clients are based.

In 2026, our new events format will include regional events in North America,

Edward Bryce Morris: EMEA,

Operator: and APAC. Our new event format will prioritize more intimate in-person connection and peer networking. So to summarize, we are planning to return to CV growth in 2026 driven by improvements to our retention life cycle, our product portfolio, how we go to market, and our research. We are restructuring the business to more intensively focus it on growing research contract value, and we are increasing our investment in AI to ensure that our evolution to the AI research company continues apace. I will now turn the call over to Leo Christian Finn to go into more detail about our financials. Chris?

Leo Christian Finn: Thanks, George, and good afternoon, everyone. As George discussed, we are starting to see some meaningful areas of improvement in the business. This includes early success with our new AI Access product, which had over $5,000,000 of bookings since its launch in September, along with an increase in the portion of CV multiyear contracts from the prior year. We also saw client retention improve throughout the year, and client count increased sequentially in the fourth quarter for the first time since late 2021. Furthermore, we delivered strong free cash flow of approximately $18,000,000 for the year. We are looking to continue this momentum in 2026 with ongoing expansion of our product offering, an enhanced focus on creating actionable, all-seasons, data-centric research, and expanding Forrester AI capabilities.

Despite this momentum, we are disappointed with Q4 and full year 2025 results. Continuing macro uncertainty, the impact of the U.S. government strategy consulting pullback, and the ongoing underperformance of our events business caused us to deliver full year 2025 results near the low end of our guidance. For the quarter, overall revenue was $101,100,000, representing a 6% decline from Q4 2024 revenues of $108,000,000. Overall revenue for the year came in at $396,900,000, representing an 8% decline from the $432,500,000 we generated in 2024. As we outlined earlier this week, we have taken action to focus the business on our higher-margin subscription research CV business and to better align our cost structure with our projected revenue. We believe these steps will help to accelerate our return to CV growth.

I will now provide some additional details regarding these actions, mainly focused on changing the way we operate our consulting and events businesses. In consulting, we plan to sunset the strategy consulting business line in early 2026. This business line saw a major decline in its U.S. government business last year along with other ongoing macro-related challenges, which resulted in a greater than 50% decline in strategy consulting bookings in 2025. We do not foresee the business environment for strategy consulting improving in the near term. We will continue to execute our existing backlog through 2026, but we will not sell new strategy consulting engagements going forward. We are also making significant changes to how we deliver events in 2026, as George just outlined.

In terms of headcount impact from these changes, along with other efficiency programs we are executing, we have reduced our workforce by approximately 8%. We expect to incur approximately $13,500,000 to $14,000,000 of cost for these actions, including $9,900,000 that was recognized during the fourth quarter. We plan to use a portion of the cost savings to fund focused investments in AI to take advantage of our unique position in this growth opportunity. In terms of segment results for the quarter, please note that we have recast our CV metric for our 2026 plan foreign currency rates; we have included the historical recast CV metrics going back to 2023 on the investor relations section of our website. For the Research segment, CV came in at $292,400,000 as of 12/31/2025.

This is a 6% decline from December 2024, which is a modest improvement from the prior quarter decline of 7%. The decrease in CV was largely due to low wallet retention, primarily driven by lower enrichment numbers. Wallet retention has slowly improved throughout the year, and now sits at 87%. We have initiatives in place to accelerate this improvement in 2026. As George outlined, sales and customer success are laser-focused on the execution of the key client engagement steps needed to drive up retention. In addition, new business has seen some improvement from the prior year. We believe this improvement will continue based on the initial success of AI Access and additional product launches we have on the roadmap for 2026. We saw a four-point improvement in client retention year over year.

This helped increase client count in Q4. As discussed for new business, we see AI Access and other product enhancements contributing to ongoing improvements in client retention as we continue into 2026. The steady improvement of metrics and the initiatives we have in place give us a positive outlook for CV performance in 2026. We expect CV to show modest growth as we exit the year. From a revenue standpoint, our Research business posted revenues of $76,600,000 for the quarter, and $295,600,000 for the full year. This represents declines of 4% and 7%, respectively, versus the prior year periods. For the full year, revenue from our subscription research products was down approximately 4% as growth in Forrester Decisions was offset by declines in the final remaining cohorts of our legacy research products.

Our Consulting business posted revenues of $21,800,000 in the fourth quarter, and $88,200,000 for the full year, representing declines of 16% and 9%, respectively, versus the prior year periods. Despite these declines, we saw some positive trends in our consulting services in 2025. This includes consistent performance from our advisory and content marketing businesses. However, the overall performance of the consulting business was significantly impacted by the declines in strategy consulting discussed earlier. And finally, our Events business posted revenues of $2,700,000, representing a decline of 1% compared to 2024. The comparison between the prior year was impacted by the shift of an additional event into Q4 2025. For the full year, the segment declined by 29% to $13,100,000.

This was driven materially by lower sponsorship revenue along with ticket sales. Continuing down our P&L, on an adjusted basis, operating expenses for the fourth quarter decreased by 2%, primarily driven by ongoing cost management. Specifically on headcount, for the fourth quarter, we were down 6% compared to the same period in 2024. On a full year basis, operating expenses decreased by 7%, largely driven by labor reductions and associated compensation and benefit savings, with additional savings from other categories, including facilities expenses related to the consolidation of our real estate footprint. Operating income decreased by 53% to $4,200,000 or 4.1% of revenue in the current quarter compared to $8,900,000 or 8.3% of revenue in 2024.

On a full year basis, operating income decreased by 21% to $30,300,000 or 7.6% of revenue compared with $38,500,000 or 8.9% of revenue in 2024. We continue to be committed to aligning our cost structure with our revenue outlook. Interest expense for the quarter was $700,000, which was consistent with 2024. On a full year basis, interest expense was $2,700,000, down from $3,000,000 in 2024. Finally, net income and earnings per share both decreased 53% compared to Q4 of last year, with net income at $3,200,000 and earnings per share at $0.17 for the current quarter, compared with net income of $6,800,000 and earnings per share of $0.36 in 2024. On a full year basis, net income decreased 21% to $22,200,000 and EPS decreased 21% to $1.16. Looking at our capital structure, cash flow from operating activities for 2025 was $21,100,000, and capital expenditure was $3,000,000.

The positive cash flow this year was driven by strong collections and improved vendor payment terms from our procurement team. We did not pay down any debt, nor did we repurchase any shares in the quarter. We have over $77,000,000 of our stock repurchase authorization intact. Our balance sheet remains very strong, with cash at the end of the quarter of approximately $127,700,000, and debt of only $35,000,000. Turning to guidance, starting with the top line. For 2026, we expect revenue to be $345,000,000 to $360,000,000, or down 9% to 13% versus 2025. The revenue outlook is driven by last year’s bookings decline, which hampers first half growth, with better performance anticipated for the second half. As mentioned earlier, we are sunsetting our strategy consulting product line.

This will have a negative impact on revenue. In addition, the reworking of our events business will pose an ongoing risk contemplated in the low end of our guidance. This guidance assumes the outlook for Research to be a mid-single-digit decline, Consulting to be a decline in the low twenties, and Events to be a decline in the high teens for the year. It should be noted that our revenue outlook pushes the Research portion of our business to be approaching 80% of total revenue. This is up from almost 75% in 2025. Given the actions we have taken to control costs, combined with the growth and AI investments we have highlighted, we would expect our operating margins to be in the range of 6% to 6.5% for 2026. Interest expense is expected to be $2,300,000 for the year, and we are guiding to a full year tax rate of 29%.

Taking all of this into account, we would expect earnings per share to be in the range of $0.72 to $0.82 for the full year. In summary, we experienced positive momentum as we exited 2025. With AI Access filling a crucial role in our product offering and additional product and Forrester AI enhancements coming in 2026, we see an improved outlook for our CV business. As we reshape consulting and events this year, we believe these two businesses will provide a more consistent catalyst of retention and new business for our core research offering. Our clients continue to grapple with the ever-evolving technology and AI landscape, and Forrester Research, Inc. is uniquely positioned to meet our clients’ needs because we bring a combination of proprietary ideas, data, and human experts to bear, all backed by a trusted relationship.

Thank you all for taking the time today. And with that, I will hand the call back to George.

George F. Colony: Thank you, Chris. To summarize, we are laser-focused on NCVI growth in 2026. Our four initiatives give us the best path to growth, and we will be diligently executing them throughout the year. The AI wave represents the biggest opportunity in the history of Forrester Research, Inc., and we are on the side and by the side of our clients as they navigate these uncharted waters. It is a very exciting time at the company. Thank you for being on the call, and I am going to hand it back to the operator for the Q&A session.

Edward Bryce Morris: Thank you, sir.

George F. Colony: As a reminder, to ask a question, you would need to press 11 on your telephone. To withdraw your question,

Edward Bryce Morris: And I show our first question comes

George F. Colony: from the line of Andrew Nicholas from William Blair. Please go ahead.

Andrew Nicholas: Hi, good afternoon. I appreciate you taking my questions. First one I had, or first line of questioning, is just on the consulting restructure here. Sounds like you expect revenue to be down a little bit over 20% in 2026. Can you just kind of bucket the different pieces of the business in terms of size that you are exiting versus continuing? And

Vincent Alexander Colicchio: is that kind of mid- to high-$60 million number a good base to think of for 2027 and beyond? Any more color on those decisions and those numbers would be great.

Leo Christian Finn: Yeah. Hi. It is Chris. Good question. Yeah. So on the sunsetting in strategy

Edward Bryce Morris: consulting,

Leo Christian Finn: the revenue impact is going to be about approximately $6,000,000. And as we go forward in 2026, we have a pretty decent-sized backlog of approximately $8,000,000 that we will be servicing throughout the year. Probably going to tail off sometime Q3, maybe Q4. So that is really the size of that bucket. And I think the range that you have—high fifties into low sixties—is about right.

Edward Bryce Morris: Got it. And in terms of

Andrew Nicholas: just for my follow-up, in terms of contract value growth year over year, down 6%, can you just give me a sense or maybe add some color as to where you are seeing lower wallet retention, maybe what the reasons for cancellation are, or any kind of tracking that you are doing there to figure out how much of it is macro sensitivity versus, you know, lower seats at your customers or any other reason for exiting? Thank you.

Leo Christian Finn: Yes. Christophe speaking. Yes. We still see some volatility

Christophe Favre: and uncertainties in the area of the U.S. government, as well as in the U.S. business on the user side of the business. But we see also pockets of momentum in the international markets, where I come from, as well as the clear turnaround as well on the high-tech side.

Operator: Look, government is still having an impact for us.

Andrew Nicholas: Understood. Thank you.

Edward Bryce Morris: Thank you. Thank you.

George F. Colony: Our next question comes from the line of Anja Soderstrom from Sidoti. So, firstly, just elaborate a bit on the product pipeline you mentioned for the year.

Christophe Favre: Could you repeat that?

Carrie Johnson Fanlo: Yeah. Can you talk about the product pipeline?

Operator: Product pipeline is for 2026.

Carrie Johnson Fanlo: Yes. You mean—hi, Anja. It is Carrie. Sort of product development, upcoming product changes. Yeah. Sure. So George alluded to some of those, primarily looking to provide our clients with more ways to buy from us. And then also, when they purchase from us, more ways that we can be embedded in where they work. So a lot of exciting offerings to come that we will announce this year. I am happy to talk in-depth to you a little bit more about those. But primarily, like I said, looking to capitalize on this moment where clients need advice and trusted expertise from Forrester Research, Inc., and making sure that we are offering them ways to work with Forrester Research, Inc. and then embedded in their day-to-day work as well.

Operator: Yeah. I mean, Anja, we have an AI—we call it AI surge. It is really scheduled for the first half of the year. So there is a good backlog here of product improvements and products.

Carrie Johnson Fanlo: Okay. Thank you. And you talked about the conference, changes to the conference schedule.

Thank you.: But I did not accept it for you taking to the conference business.

Carrie Johnson Fanlo: What was the second part of your question about conferences, Anja?

Thank you.: Yeah. Yeah. What other initiatives they have taken to improve their revenue stream from that.

Edward Bryce Morris: Not sure we are getting the

Operator: the question. But yeah. I think your question is

Carrie Johnson Fanlo: around improvements that we have made to the conference and event strategy, and also the performance. So there are two key areas where we have been focused. The first, as we discussed in prior calls, is about rebuilding the sponsorship sales organization, which is a major effort of ours, and we feel that we are in a really good place there. And the second is on a new event strategy. George and Chris both here talked about really aligning our events to better align with sponsor and attendee needs. That primarily looks like smaller events closer to where our clients are, and also smaller so that folks can interact with their peers, with more engagement at those events. So smaller, more localized events essentially for the year. I think the big innovation in 2025, Anja, was about

Operator: workshops at the events. And they were massively successful in 2025. You will see a lot of that in 2026.

Thank you.: Okay. Great. Thank you. That was all for me.

Operator: Thanks, Anja.

George F. Colony: Thank you. And I show our next question comes from the line of Vincent Alexander Colicchio from Barrington Research.

Edward Bryce Morris: Yeah, George.

Operator: Important question here, I think.

Vincent Alexander Colicchio: So why the ongoing disconnect between the value of your research versus LLM models in terms of demand? And when do you think this may change?

Christophe Favre: Yes. So I would like to give you some color here. I do not see churn as a result of AI replacements. Of course, it has come up into the sales process. But we spent a lot of time over the past months to train our sales organizations to demonstrate the value of Forrester AI Access against the large language model. And what we highlight is our Forrester AI solutions provide proprietary data, proprietary ideas, supported by human experts. And when you train your sales organizations in this way, we do not see this churn as a result of that. On the contrary, what we start to see in the marketplace is a mistrust of the content provided by some of the LLMs. So we do see an opportunity for Forrester Research, Inc. that we are going to size with our new product strategy.

Operator: So you said mistrust of the public models? You know, it is a fun narrative, Vince. It is an easy narrative. But your bank account is never going to end up in a public model. It is just never going to happen. And our proprietary research is never going to end up in a public model as well. And to get trusted data, to get a trusted bank account, you are going to go to a private model. Like I said on the last call, there has been a very big misallocation of capital going on right now for the public models. I believe 70%, when this is all done ten years from now, look back, 70% of all the revenue from these models will be made in private models, not in public models. So it is a fun—

Vincent Alexander Colicchio: Yeah. Good. Go ahead. Thanks.

Edward Bryce Morris: Thank you.

Vincent Alexander Colicchio: A helpful perspective. Thanks for that. Yeah. And with the new sales leadership, will there be any change in the sales process going forward?

Christophe Favre: Yes. So coming from the international sales organization where we had quite a strong H2 last year, I am applying some of the learning we had internationally to the North American sales organization. So the first thing I am doing is I will reorganize our go-to-market strategy in North America to be organized around six industries and focus on the high-potential accounts. I want also to ensure that we develop a business development mindset not only with the AE, but with the AM. And then really sharpen our execution on what we call the retention life cycle with my colleague of the customer success teams in order to improve our retentions. We have a lot of opportunities in improving our gross productivity here in North America and returning back to growth with our new AI Access services. You want to talk about the balanced scorecard?

Edward Bryce Morris: Yeah. So it is also the way we measure

Christophe Favre: the sales organization. So I really believe that the sales organization needs to be measured on both sides. From a quantitative side, on the pipeline, the activity that they have, but also balanced with qualitative elements like pipeline conversions, velocity of the sales, the quality of the sales. So I am implementing a new way of measuring the quality of our sales activity in order to drive faster growth in the North American business.

Vincent Alexander Colicchio: Okay. And, George, how did AI Access perform versus expectations in Q4, and how is it trending in the new year?

Operator: Yeah. We had a meeting in September where we—

Andrew Nicholas: I think we were off by—

Operator: I looked at Carrie and said, how much of this are we going to sell in Q4? Ninety percent, right? Yeah. Yeah.

Carrie Johnson Fanlo: Mhmm.

Operator: We were quite conservative about it, and it was really quite surprising in Q4. So it is interesting, Vince, because what we are finding is that companies want their executives using AI. That increases the AIQ, the artificial intelligence quotient, of those executives. So that is something that I did not—maybe you did, Carrie—but I never really calculated that as a benefit of AI Access. The fact that they are using AI to use us is again improving their AIQ and, obviously, if they are able to find our data and research much faster and to create something new and original from that data. So Carrie wants to say something. Maybe she—

Edward Bryce Morris: No.

Carrie Johnson Fanlo: No. That is exactly it.

Edward Bryce Morris: Yeah. That is exactly it. We are really very pleased.

Carrie Johnson Fanlo: With the performance of the product, exceeded our expectations, and a very strong pipeline coming in the year. So I think what is awesome about this, Vince, is that we have been working with this for now two and a half years.

Edward Bryce Morris: Mhmm.

Operator: I mean, this is like this is version 11.

Edward Bryce Morris: So—

Christophe Favre: Yep.

Leo Christian Finn: Yeah. I would add one other thing, Vince. This is Chris. It is helping on deal cycle time as well, literally cutting it by almost 50%, which is great to see. And then the client count increase that we saw coming out of the year was really in two areas. First and foremost, it was with AI Access. Those were all—that was really all new clients. And we have a big win-back campaign coming up in the first half of the year here, which we are excited about. And then, the retention improvements, the core FD business. From the retention life cycle work, you know, the stuff that Julie is working on. Already seeing it really start to take hold, which is also exciting. And one of the other reasons we feel pretty good about the outlook for this year.

Operator: Why is the velocity so much faster, Christophe, for AI Access?

Christophe Favre: It is very simple. It is easier to buy and easier to sell. And I see it as an attractive value proposition not only to grow within our existing customers, to win new customers, but we feel also a very interesting change which is winning back customers we lost over the last three years. And we win them against the competition or against organizations and also against organizations that want to build skills internally, as opposed to outsourcing it to find some consulting organization.

Vincent Alexander Colicchio: Is it helping you win back some new old clients, as you hoped?

Christophe Favre: Yes. And they are so happy when we come back with that type of value proposition. Because what they are looking at is to get faster in the way they make decisions and to do it with more confidence. And this is the way we differentiate from large language models. So it is a very strong value proposition for Forrester Research, Inc.

Vincent Alexander Colicchio: Okay. Thanks, guys, for answering my questions.

Edward Bryce Morris: Thanks, Vince. Thanks. Sorry for the long answer.

George F. Colony: Thank you. And that concludes our Q&A session. At this time, I would like to turn the conference back to Leo Christian Finn, chief financial officer, for closing remarks.

Leo Christian Finn: Yes. Thanks, everyone, for joining us today. Once again, any follow-up questions, please reach out to myself or Ed. Thank you.

Vincent Alexander Colicchio: Thank you.

George F. Colony: Thank you. This concludes today’s conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.

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