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Q2 2023 Information Services Group Inc Earnings Call

Participants

Barry Holt; Senior Advisor; Information Services Group, Inc.

Humberto P. Alfonso; Executive VP & CFO; Information Services Group, Inc.

Michael P. Connors; Chairman & CEO; Information Services Group, Inc.

David Joseph Storms; Director of Research; Stonegate Capital Markets, Inc., Research Division

Joe Gomes

Marc Frye Riddick; Business and Consumer Services Analyst; Sidoti & Company, LLC

Michael Math

Vincent Alexander Colicchio; MD; Barrington Research Associates, Inc., Research Division

Presentation

Operator

Good morning, and welcome, everyone, to the Information Services Group Second Quarter Conference Call. This call is being recorded, and a replay will be available on ISG's website within 24 hours. Now I'd like to turn the call over to Mr. Barry Holt for his opening remarks and introductions. Mr. Holt, please go ahead.

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Barry Holt

Thank you, operator, Hello, and good morning. My name is Barry Holt I'm the Senior Communications Executive. I'd like to welcome everyone to ISG's conference call. I'm joined today by Michael Connors, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer; and Humberto Alfonso, Executive Vice President and Manager Officer. Before we begin, I'd like to read a forward-looking statement. It is important to note that patients may contain forward-looking statements to represent of the management of ISG concerning future events and their details. These statements are not guarantees of future results and are subject to certain risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those anticipated.

For a more detailed listing of the risks and other factors that could affect future results, please refer to the forward-looking statement contained in our Form 8-K that was furnished last night to the SEC and the Risk Factors section in ISG's Form 10-K covering full year results. You should also read ISG's annual report on Form 10-K and any other relevant documents, including any amendments or supplements to these documents filed with the SEC. You'll be able to obtain free copies of any of SEC filings on either ISG's website at www.isg-one.com or the SEC's website at www.sec.gov. ISG undertakes no obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements to reflect subsequent events or circumstances. During this call, we will discuss certain non-GAAP financial measures, which ISG believes improves the comparability of the company's financial results between periods and provides for greater transparency of key measures used to evaluate the company's performance.

The non-GAAP measures, which we will touch on today include adjusted EBITDA, adjusted net earnings and the presentation of selected financial data on a constant currency basis. Non-GAAP measures are provided as additional information and should not be considered in isolation or as a substitute to the financial results prepared in accordance with GAAP. For the reconciliation of all non-GAAP measures presented to the most closely applicable GAAP measure, please refer to our current report on Form 8-K, which was filed last night with the SEC, and now I'd like to turn the call over to Michael Connors, who will be followed by Humberto Alfonso... Mike?

Michael P. Connors

Thank you, Barry, and good morning, everyone. Today, we will review 4 areas. First, our top line growth, including our record second quarter revenues, record first half revenues and the demand environment driving our performance. Second, our growing recurring revenue streams third, our commitment to returning capital to shareholders and finally, our view on how the third quarter is shaping up. ISG continued its strong start to the year in Q2. We generated record second quarter revenues of $75 million, up 6% over the prior year. Capping a first half that saw us generate a record $153 million of revenues, up 9% on an operating basis. Demand for our unique combination of cost optimization, digital transformation and platform services remains strong as evidenced by our first half top line growth. Our cost optimization services have experienced a surge in demand this year as we successfully help our clients reset their overall cost baseline for the long term. Our holistic approach to cost takeout include sourcing, network, software and automation. We are also seeing renewed interest in outsourced infrastructure services, data centers and private cloud as companies look to rein in public cloud expenses that balloon during the pandemic.

These efforts free up much-needed budget to allow organizations to more aggressively fund their high-priority digital initiatives, and to that point, our expertise in digital transformation continues to be an area of strong client engagement and demand intended. Key areas of focus include customer experience, cybersecurity, cloud, application modernization and data analytics, all of which helps our clients become secure, intelligent connected enterprises. Now a comment about profitability in the quarter our EBITDA was impacted by a negative $400,000 in the quarter due to an unexpected health care expense related to our self-insured status. This was a unique circumstance of major health expenses hitting all at once that we do not expect to be repeated. In addition in the quarter, we optimized our resource levels slightly downward and had a severance expense of approximately $1 million, with the majority of that in Europe. This will enhance our profitability during the back half of the year. Now turning to our recurring revenues, our recurring revenues continue to be robust, up 21% in the quarter to $32 million, driven by demand for our research and platform services and an overall increase in our multiyear contracts.

For the first half, recurring revenues reached $65 million or 42% of our firm-wide revenue. To put this in perspective, this is nearly the same amount of recurring net revenues we had for all of 2019. As a reminder of what we announced last quarter under Phase 2 of ISG X, by 2025, we are aiming to expand our adjusted EBITDA margin, a further 200 basis points from the end of 2022 to approximately 17% and accelerated the growth of our recurring revenues to $150 million after surpassing our previous target of $100 million last year. Now moving to shareholder returns. Our commitment to shareholders is demonstrated by our disciplined management approach that allows us to continue returning cash to our investors. During the quarter, we paid a quarterly dividend for the eighth quarter in a row since we instituted a cash dividend in 2021 and after raising it by 12.5% earlier this year. Our commitment is further reflected in the $25 million expansion of our share buyback program that we announced in our earnings release. We now have nearly $29 million earmarked for share repurchases. Beyond dividends and share buybacks, our disciplined capital allocation strategy includes reinvesting in our business, reducing debt and supplementing our organic growth with strategic acquisitions to drive long-term shareholder value. On that last point, we continue to actively look at acquisition targets and explore avenues to unlock the value of our automation unit.

Now turning to our regions, the Americas had a solid Q2, delivering $42 million of revenue, up 7% versus the prior year on the strength of our cost optimization and enterprise change and research services all up double digits. For the half, revenues for the Americas were up 12%. During the quarter, we also saw double-digit growth in our consumer banking, health sciences, media and public sector industry verticals. Key client engagements during the second quarter included Exelon, AIG, Constellation Energy and Cognizant. During the quarter, a leading global health care technology company awarded ISG a new million dollar ISG governance contract. The contract extends our scope of services with this client, which has 140 active GovernX users and manages about $400 million of supplier contracts via the IFC platform. We also added nearly $2 million of business with an existing insurance client, helping them streamline the development and maintenance of more than 1,000 apps in their portfolio with targeted savings in excess of $40 million. I also relationship with a major U.S. clean energy company to support its spin-off and set up a new provider ecosystem for the newly divested company, an engagement worth about $1 million to ISG. Now turning to Europe. Our Q2 revenues of $24 million were up 5% over the last year. For the quarter, Europe delivered double-digit revenue growth in our health sciences, energy, utilities and public sector industry verticals and in our automation business. Key client engagements in Europe in the second quarter included Boat lagged, Talk Talk, Danske Bank and Allianz. During the quarter, ISG continued to expand its long-standing relationship with a leading global automotive manufacturer. We are serving 7 major brands within the company and generated more than $5 million in first half revenues with this client.

Our latest work includes helping the client source infrastructure and product life cycle management providers for its battery manufacturing subsidiary, whose batteries power of the company's new electric vehicles. We also won $1 million engagement with a company that designs, engineers and build high-tech facilities for the semiconductor pharmaceutical and data center industries. The one IT program we developed for the client, cover sourcing, organization and governance model design and IT service management. In addition, we extended our ISG automation services and licenses for 2 years with a U.K.-based broadband provider for a million in revenue. Now turning to Asia Pacific, our Q2 revenues of $8 million were flat compared with last year. We generated double-digit growth in our Research and GovernX business. Key clients in the quarter included the Australian Taxation Office, the Australian Department of Home Affairs, the insurance company, Bupa, High-grade and Vic Rose, a state government agency in Victoria, Australia. In a very positive development, we recently were awarded the largest GovernX engagement to date in Asia Pacific, a multimillion-dollar contract with one of the largest independent payment solution providers for the Australian financial services sector. This contract begins in the second half of this year. Now let me turn to guidance. We are energized by our record top line growth and the scaling of our recurring revenues, underscoring the strength of our portfolio as we head into the second half of this year from cost optimization and cybersecurity to digital transformation and enterprise change, our unmatched solutions addresses the needs of our clients today.

So far this year, we have served 660 clients, including more than 100 new clients at the halfway mark, organizations that are trusting ISC with their most critical initiatives and with good reason, we advise our clients at every step navigating technological and organizational change that leads to greater operation operating efficiency and faster growth. On the strength of our portfolio and our market opportunities, we see continued growth ahead. We are also mindful of the current economic uncertainties that may affect enterprise decision-making in the near term. In consideration of all this, for the third quarter, we are targeting revenues of between $73 million and $75 million, up 9% at the top end and consistent with our high single-digit growth objective and adjusted EBITDA between $10.5 million and $11.5 million, the highest quarterly guidance range we have ever given. As you know, we recently announced that Bertlfonzois retiring this month from his role as Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of the firm. Michael Sheri, who is with us in the room today will become the new CFO of ISG. Michael brings a strong industry and operating background to ISG, most recently serving as COO of Cognizant Software and platform engineering. I want to personally thank Bert for his many contributions to our firm, his leadership and for his friendship. And I want to welcome Michael for the team. So with that, let me turn the call over to Bert, who will summarize our financial results. Bert?

Humberto P. Alfonso

Well, thank you, Mike, and good morning, everyone. It has indeed been an honor and a privilege to serve as CFO of ISG and to work with all of you over the past 2 years, and I thank you for your support, and now on to the quarter. As Mike mentioned, ISC delivered record second quarter revenues. Revenues for the second quarter were $74.6 million, up 6% compared with the second quarter last year. There was essentially no FX impact in the quarter. In the Americas reported revenues of $42.3 million, up 7% versus the prior year. In Europe, revenues were $24.4 million, up 5%, and in Asia Pacific, revenues were $8 million, flat versus the prior year. Second quarter adjusted EBITDA was $10.1 million, down 6% from last year, resulting in an EBITDA margin of 14%. Second quarter operating income was $4.9 million compared with $7.4 million in the prior year. Net income for the quarter was $2.3 million or $0.05 to $40 billion share compared with net income of $5 million or $0.10 per fully diluted share in the prior year. Second quarter adjusted net income was $5.3 million or $0.11 per fully diluted share compared with adjusted net income of $6.8 million or $0.13 per diluted share in the prior year's second quarter.

Headcount as of June 30, 2023, was $1,597 down 31 professionals or 1.9% from Q1. Consulting utilization for the second quarter was 70%. Our balance sheet continues to have the strength and flexibility to support our business over the long term. For the quarter, net cash generated from operations was positive by $2.8 million, and we ended the quarter with $19.6 million of cash, down from $23.7 million at the end of Q1. During the second quarter, ISG paid dividends totaling $2.2 million. We purchased $2.9 million of shares and made $1.5 million of earn out payments related to the 2022 acquisition of Change for growth. Our next quarterly dividend will be payable on September 28 to shareholders of record on September 6. We -- our debt balance at the end of the second quarter was $79.2 million, unchanged from the prior year-end, and our debt-to-EBITDA ratio remains in great shape at 1.8x, our borrowing costs for the quarter was 6.6% up from 2.4% last year, and we ended the quarter with 48.5 million shares outstanding. Mike will now share some concluding remarks before we go on to the Q&A. Over to you, Mike.

Michael P. Connors

Thank you, Bert. To summarize, ISG is off to a strong start in 2023, delivering record revenues for the second quarter and first half. We have good growth opportunities ahead as we help our clients optimize their businesses and prepare for the next wave of the digital economy. Demand for our platforms and research continues to push our recurring revenues higher, now over 40% of our firm-wide total. We aim to deliver $150 million of recurring revenues at the end of 2025 after crossing the $100 million threshold last year. We look to resume our margin growth in the second half on our way to our year-end 2025 target of 17%, up 200 basis points from last year, and we continue to reward our shareholders with our regular quarterly dividend and by increasing our share purchase $25 million. As always, we are focused on creating value for the long term, and we are steadfast in our mission to deliver operational excellence to our clients. So thank you very much for calling in this morning, and now let me turn the session over to the operator for your questions.

Question and Answer Session

Operator

Today's question-and-answer session will be conducted electronically. If you'd like to ask a question, please start and the #1 on your telephone keypad. If you find that your question has been answered or you wish to -- you may again, press star 1. Again, if you would like to ask a question, Stan on your touchtone keypad, we'll pause a moment to allow the Q&A Q2 assembled. Your first question comes from line of Storms with Stone -- your line is open.

David Joseph Storms

Just wondering if we could start with the market and kind of what you're seeing there now that rates are starting to hopefully stabilize -- is there any appetite, any size plays that you're looking to take anything like that?

Michael P. Connors

Anyway, thank you for the question. Yes, on the M&A and environment, we are active as we have been for really our whole history. We are continuing to focus on our string of pearl strategy, which is on kind of a bolt-on strategy. We are focused on recurring revenue streams to continue to increase that and also on all things digital. So yes, we are in the market. We continue to talk with possible targets. These things are always a journey, and you always try to balance what you think is fair value, so that all ends up with a win-win situation. But we are active, and we will -- if we find something that makes financial sense for the firm and fill some of the channels that we would like to be able to accelerate our growth, and we will act on those.

David Joseph Storms

That's perfect, and then just one more from me. When you think about your current revenue stream, great to see that it's up over 40%, well on track to hitting your $150 million goal, do you have an efficient front to your mind where you would want recurring revenues to be x amount of revenues? Or if optimal you want it to be 100% of revenues. How do you think about that going forward?

Michael P. Connors

Well, look, I'd love to have 100% recurring, but that really is not our business model. I'm having to do a percentage because if I do that than the other parts of the business, I don't want them not to grow at the rates that we would like to have them grow. So that's why we use kind of an absolute number. We'll see how the rest of the firm performs as well. But as we approach at some point, if we could get to a level of in or around 50% recurring revenues, I think that the multiple expansion for our firm is significant from where we are today even at 40% of recurring revenues. So if we continue to have that climb over time, again, I feel like we are undervalued, and we have both margin and multiple expansion as...

David Joseph Storms

That's very helpful.

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Michael Math with Singular REIT Research.

Michael Math

Congratulations on all the revenue growth. Very impressive, So particularly in annually recurring, I'm just not seeing that in the other companies that I covered, so very impressive. One thing to ask about, though, while revenues are up, gross margin is down by 290 basis points from the 40% levels in 2022, for our modeling purposes, do you see gross margin at current levels going forward or return to those 40% levels?

Michael P. Connors

Yes. Thanks for the question, Michael. In the second quarter, you're quite right. Our direct costs were higher. They were higher by a bit over $4 million, and that clearly impacted us. SG&A was really only up about 2%. It does include the $1 million that we talked about in terms of severance, and while that applies across the board from an accounting perspective, it gets accounted for in SG&A, and so it looks a little higher, but SG&A is actually fairly well controlled, and we do a good job on that part. But yes, no, our objective is clearly to be at 40% or more as we were in the first quarter. First quarter, we were about $4.5 million -- so when you look at the onetime severance, which is in that number as well as the $400,000 that we talked about on the medical, it was below our expectation in the quarter. So our objective and clearly where we're heading in the back half is to get to that 40% plus.

Michael Math

You're quite right. Very helpful, my final question just comes back to geographic trends that you observed. Your release mentioned that your separations were concentrated in Europe. I didn't see revenue growth being flat in Europe it looks like it was up. Where are you seeing Europe kind of for the second half of the year?

Michael P. Connors

So good question, Michael, so if I think about Europe in the context of the U.S., Europe, I think, has had a bit more challenged from a macro environment than the U.S. has had an -- we had good -- really good growth in Europe at 5% on an operating basis for the quarter despite the macro environment. But we would anticipate that, that would be higher for the back half of the year, and the reason is primarily driven by the demand environment around optimization and around some of our recurring revenue streams, our platforms, our research, our GovernX. So we feel like the pipeline is their decision-making is a bit slower, but it's about the timing of the decision, not if there will be a decision. So we're optimistic on the back half of the year that Europe will continue to grow and likely at a higher pace.

Michael Math

Thank you, and congratulations again.

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Vincent Colicchio with Barrington Research.

Vincent Alexander Colicchio

Yes. Nice quarter... And... Question on APAC. What are your thoughts for the balance of the year? And also on the Americas side, which what I think led this quarter, should that grow in the second half?

Michael P. Connors

Yes. On Asia Pacific, I would say on Asia Pacific look at it kind of in this holistic full year. We expect our normal kind of double-digit growth for that region on a full year basis or thereabouts each year, so there's some ups and downs a little bit on some of the governments in by quarter. So I would read nothing into flat second quarter in Asia Pacific, but think about it as a growth region, and we expect it to look that way during the back half of the year. For the Americas, yes, we think the Americas is -- they had a great first half, 12% growth on the top line. I don't know if we can do that level of growth continuously, but the Americas demand environment looks good, decision making, of course, a bit slower than normal, but the demand is there. So it's a matter of decisioning there. So we feel good about the Americas as well.

Vincent Alexander Colicchio

Is there any general question, from last quarter to this quarter? Any change in sentiment sales cycles or anything of that nature across the board in your geographies?

Michael P. Connors

No. It's the same. They are -- it's measured in terms of its timing. But I don't think it's different timing now than it was earlier there, but it's not set up either. I think everybody still is moving to a bit of a slower pace. It takes a few more approvals to get things done. But what we like about it is that the demand is there. There's not a lack of demand. It's just the timing of some of these things and how long they take to close and get started.

Vincent Alexander Colicchio

Okay. Everyone, as you know, is talking about gene to AI, still early. A lot of companies doing proof of concept are you being retained for any work now? And if you were, I would assume it would be minimal. But I'm just curious, your thoughts on if next year could be -- you see a meaningful tailwind from generate related work.

Michael P. Connors

Yes, Vince, good question. I mean, here's how we think about it. Enterprises right now are starting what is likely to be a decade-long kind of transformation similar to what cloud was 10 years ago. So think about it in that regard. The true line here is speed, allowing more to be done in kind of less time, and this puts ISG right in the center of a bit of kind of advising our clients on how harness AI. We are doing that. Right now, we have a number of use cases. We're tracking offerings from the providers so that we can ensure our clients can best navigate. We are creating an ecosystem there, and I think this is especially important because with AI, there are some kind of tracer elements that can damage an enterprise brand if it's not handled with expertise. So yes, we are focused on that. From a client standpoint, we are working with clients. It's early stage.

The one other aspect I would add to this, Vince, in terms of how do we, as ISG use AI. And we use AI for years with our GovernX platform beginning with Watson and then developing our own AI for contract data extractions where it comes through hundreds of pages and extracts deliverables and obligations. We call them DNOs, terms and so forth, and you'll recall, we did an acquisition first quarter last year, a tech company called agreement, and we did that because they had some AI technology around smart contracting, and we have now incorporated that into our GovernX model. So I think you'll continue to see announcements from ISG over the next months ahead on this topic, I would say, ranging from research to advisory to contract management around automation. So keep an eye out for that. But it's early stages. And this will build over time. And again, I would look at the cloud 10 years ago and use it as an analogy with AI. Vince, I hope that helps.

Vincent Alexander Colicchio

Yes It's a very helpful perspective. I will go back to the queue.

Operator

Your next question is from the line of Joe Gomes with Noble Capital.

Joe Gomes

Good morning. So the first one, I just want to get a little better understanding here. Last quarter, you guys talked about the second half of 2022 hiring, and it was beginning to pay off, and in this quarter, obviously, you took a restructuring or severance charges. Just trying to figure out how that all fit together as to the beginning to pay off in your commentary last quarter to, hey, we're doing some severance this quarter.

Michael P. Connors

Yes. No, look, let me reconcile that for you. As you know, we hired up over a couple of 100, 200, 250, last year. That is helping to drive the 9% top line growth in the first half of this year. What we did in the third quarter is just like we do with our clients, we're always looking to upgrade our resources and skill base, and we decided to optimize our resources a bit in Q2 to improve our overall skills and performance levels, if you would. So if you think about the numbers of people, it's a fairly small number. If you think about what our headcount is versus the prior quarter, I think it's kind of net down a little over 30 and compared that to the $250 million we brought in, I think you'd see that there's really a -- it's complementary to that. But look at it as kind of our overall trimming that we normally do each year, we just concentrated it here in the second quarter and really in a small number. But because it's Europe, the severance is a little bit outsized.

Joe Gomes

Okay. Appreciate it, and then one of the things you talked about in the past that haven't don't recall you talking about too much here lately, the training as a service option. I was wondering maybe you can kind of give us an update on how that is unfolding.

Michael P. Connors

Yes, that is very hot. We have found that the close cycle, the sales cycle is a little bit longer than we anticipated. We have a significant one in the -- that we've been trying to get closed, frankly, for over 45 days that we think we hope will close during the third quarter. But yes, we are very hot on what we call PAS training as a service. It's resonating. We have some very large blue-chip clients that we also use as references. Again, this is an early stage emerging, but this is a definite growth opportunity for our firm, and we'll grow at outsized growth rate from the overall firm growth rate. So yes, we are very much on it, and I hope to have something in the third quarter to say.

Joe Gomes

Great, and one more for me. Michael, earlier your answer to one previous question, as you were talking about how you feel that the stock is undervalued. You noted the $25 million increase in the buyback, any thoughts about getting a little more aggressive on a quarterly basis with the buyback? Are you still think you're going to stick more in that $2 million to $3 million level here, at least in the near term?

Michael P. Connors

Yes, good question. Last year, obviously, we were a bit more aggressive earlier this year -- or late last year, obviously, we made the acquisitions. We've had some acquisition costs, and so really is a matter of how we allocate across the capital allocation. We increased the dividend by 12%. So we're always focused on what our cash flow looks like and how we deploy it for our shareholders. The increase, obviously, you should take that as a signal that the buyback is important to us, and philosophically, and I've said this before, our objective is to shield our investors from any dilution from our stock-based compensation. We're not necessarily trying to drive the share count down in a significant way. But that will continue to be our objective, and you'll see more of that from us in the future.

Joe Gomes

Great. Thanks. I'll get back in queue.

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Marc Riddick with Sidoti.

Marc Frye Riddick

Very good, very good, and Bert, thank you for everything and all your efforts over the last couple of years, It's certainly been a pleasure working with you and hope you enjoy your return going forward. So... Appreciate the... Absolutely, Well, since my AI question was already taken. I did want to sort of maybe shift gears a little bit. Maybe you could share a little bit on maybe what you're seeing around client vertical behaviors, certainly with a lot of the detail you've given in some of the growth drivers and some of the cost savings efforts. Just wondering if there were any particular industry verticals that you're seeing spend out either positively or...

Michael P. Connors

Yes, good question. First of all, maybe the hot ones, Consumer services very high. Life sciences and health care, very hot, surprisingly to some degree, public sector, very hot, media technology high. I would say BFSI overall, relatively flat Energy is decent, manufacturing, I would call it, just ticked above kind of a year ago. So that's how we would think about the different segments. One other point on the industry is that we look at the industries in kind of a 4-box scenario where there are clients that are in a stabilization phase with the macro environment and that -- those are things like media, like tech a little bit now on kind of travel and tourism, a lot of work with the airlines on cost optimization, et cetera.

Then you've got kind of the other side of the spectrum, if you will, kind of the top right box type spectrum where you have the health care, you have the pharma, you have the medical devices that are all seizing kind of growth opportunities that they see out in the market, and then you have the rest of them kind of in between there. So I would say that cost optimization is still the lead, and they're using it to take cost out in a more swift manner, but also using it so that they can free up funds for their budget to drive their digital initiatives, which is really what's going to drive their growth in the future. So that's how we would think about the different industry verticals, Mark.

Marc Frye Riddick

That's very helpful, and then I was sort of wondering, and this is maybe a little further down the road, but we've seen like this period of time where M&A activity, global M&A activity just -- and big picture lives has certainly come down from record highs a couple of years ago. I was wondering, though, it seems as though it's maybe picked up a little bit sequentially. I was wondering if you're seeing anything along those lines driving any interest or driving any potential green shoots going forward?

Michael P. Connors

Yes, and again, on the M&A, we're active. We've always been -- I would say there's always -- I don't think there's much difference in terms of the seller thinking that their asset is worth greater than the buyer. So I think that's still a phenomenon that remains maybe the delta between those 2 is a little bit tighter now with this environment than it had been a couple of years ago. But overall, I think when we think about the assets that we look at, we know it's both a financial consideration, but it's also an emotional consideration, and we think that what we have, which is a combination of cash, stock and earn-out component and the ability to scale the business that we would acquire are the attractive elements that when we consummate a transaction and you ask an owner, why did you choose ISG, those would be the reason. So we still feel very good and confident about those in our imminent day to work.

Marc Frye Riddick

That's very helpful. Thanks you.

Operator

I am showing no further questions in the queue. I'll turn the call back to Mike Connors for his closing remarks.

Michael P. Connors

Well, let me close by saying thank you to all of our professionals worldwide for your dedication to our clients and for working together as a global team to deliver our strong top line results in the first half. Our people have a passion for delivering the best advice and support to our clients as they continue their digital journeys, and I could not be prouder of them. So -- and thanks to all of you on the call today for your continued support and confidence in ISG. Have a great day.

Operator

This does conclude today's teleconference. You may disconnect now.