3 July 2024
ActiveOps
plc
("ActiveOps", the "Company" or the "Group")
Results for the year ended 31
March 2024
Double digit ARR growth and
sustainable profit before tax provide strong basis for
expansion
ActiveOps plc (AIM: AOM), a leading
provider of Decision Intelligence software for service
operations, is pleased to announce its
audited results for the year ended 31 March 2024.
Financial Highlights:
Year ended 31 March
|
2024
|
2023
|
Change
|
Annual recurring revenue
"ARR"1
|
£25.1m
|
£22.6m
|
+11%
|
Revenue
|
£26.8m
|
£25.5m
|
+5%
|
Software & Subscription revenue
|
£23.8m
|
£22.1m
|
+8%
|
Training & implementation "T&I" revenue
|
£3.0m
|
£3.4m
|
-12%
|
Gross margin
|
84%
|
82%
|
+2ppt
|
Adjusted
EBITDA3
|
£2.4m
|
£0.7m
|
+243%
|
Profit/(loss) before tax
|
£1.0m
|
£(0.2)m
|
-
|
Earnings/(loss) per share on
continuing operations
|
1.18p
|
(0.70)p
|
-
|
Net cash and cash
investments5
|
£17.6m
|
£15.4m
|
+14%
|
·
|
ARR growth of 11% (14% constant
currency) against prior year
|
·
|
Total Revenue growth of 5% (9%
constant currency), delivering total revenue of £26.8m, driven
primarily by increased recurring SaaS revenues
|
·
|
Gross profit margins increased to
84%, (2023: 82%) supported by a heavier SaaS to T&I revenue
mix
|
·
|
Strong increase in adjusted
EBITDA3 to £2.4m (2023: £0.7m), including an increase in
capitalised development spend as the Group continues to focus on
the development of advanced AI-based product features and prudent
cost management
|
·
|
Healthy operating cash
conversion4 of 175% (2023: 486%) arising from
annual-in-advance billing
|
·
|
Sustainable profit before tax of
£1.0m (2023: loss of £0.2m)
|
·
|
Balance sheet remains strong with
£17.6m cash and cash investments5 (2023: £15.4m) and
remains debt free
|
Operational Highlights
·
|
Strong expansion across existing
customers resulting in Net Revenue Retention2 (NRR) of
107%, (110% on a constant currency basis (2023: 110%))
|
·
|
82% of customers increased or
maintained ARR, including 27% who increased ARR by 20% or
more
|
·
|
Three new customers secured, each
with significant expansion potential
|
·
|
The upsell of Series 3 for ControliQ
continues to go well
|
·
|
Momentum in CaseWorkiQ continues to
build, with total CaseWorkiQ ARR growth of 95%
|
·
|
Three significant ControliQ
enterprise contracts secured following thorough and competitive RFP
processes, as each enterprise saw the benefits of the proven
enterprise-scale capabilities of ControliQ and an ability to
deliver material cost savings with rapid ROI
|
·
|
Expansion of the Senior Leadership
Team has brought additional, valuable experience and will provide
increased focus on the execution of ActiveOps' growth
strategy
|
Outlook
·
|
Trading in the first few months of
FY25 has been in line with the Board's expectations, driven by
customer expansions and the addition of a new customer with
significant expansion potential
|
·
|
Exciting product roadmap, including
release in FY25 of ControliQ Series 4, incorporating further AI and
Machine Learning features
|
·
|
Results of the prior period
investment in product development and marketing give the Board
confidence to make disciplined and focused investment in the global
sales operation in the coming year to look to accelerate organic
growth rate
|
ActiveOps CEO, Richard Jeffery commented:
"As we look back on FY24, and consider the way ahead, we do so
with an increased sense of confidence. The investments into our
product and marketing capabilities are delivering demonstrable
returns, particularly in terms of strong expansion with existing
customers and high retention rates. The ability of our products to
blend AI and human intelligence with information drawn from other
applications to deliver powerful insights is resonating more than
ever. The strength of our balance sheet and growth in profitability
means we are now well placed to invest into our global sales
operation to replicate our success on a wider basis, aiming to
drive further growth across all our key markets."
Footnote to Financial highlights
The above non-GAAP measures are
unaudited
1.
|
Annual Recurring Revenue is
recurring revenue from contracts with customers
|
2.
|
Net Revenue Retention is the
percentage of recurring revenue retained from existing
customers
|
3.
|
Adjusted EBITDA is used by
management to assess the trading performance of the business.
Defined as Operating profit before depreciation, amortisation,
share-based payment charges and exceptional items and includes FX
differences.
|
4.
|
Cash conversion is defined as Cash
generated from Operations in the Consolidated Statement of Cash
Flows, adjusted to exclude cash payments for exceptional items as a
percentage of adjusted EBITDA.
|
5.
|
Cash and cash equivalents plus cash
investments on the Balance Sheet at the period end.
|
For
more information, please contact:
ActiveOps
|
Via Alma
|
Richard Jeffery, Chief Executive
Officer
|
www.activeops.com
|
Emma Salthouse, Chief Financial
Officer
|
|
|
|
Investec Bank plc
|
+44 (0)20 7597 5970
|
Corporate Broking & PLC Advisory
|
|
Patrick Robb / Nick
Prowting
|
|
|
|
Alma Strategic Communications
|
+ 44(0) 203 405 0205
|
Caroline Forde / Will Ellis
Hancock
|
|
About ActiveOps
ActiveOps is Software as a Service
business, dedicated to helping organisations create MORE value from
their service operations. ActiveOps' Decision Intelligence software
solutions are specifically designed to support leaders with the
vast number of decisions they make daily in the name of running
their operations. Our customers make better decisions and consume
less time and effort making them. The outcomes are significantly
improved turnaround times and double-digit improvements in
productivity with backlogs of work materially reduced. Customers
also leverage the capacity created to invest in transformation and
development, as well as to reduce levels of new
recruitment.
The Company's AI-powered SaaS
solutions are underpinned by 15+ years of operational data and its
AOM methodology which is proven to drive cross department
decision-making.
The Company has over 180 employees,
serving a global customer base of enterprise customers from offices
in the UK, Ireland, USA, Canada,
Australia, India, and South Africa. The Group's
customers are predominantly in the banking, insurance, healthcare
administration and business process outsourcing (BPO) sectors,
including Nationwide, TD Bank, Elevance and DXC
Technology.
Chair's Statement
Introduction
FY24 was another year of achievement
for ActiveOps, as the Company successfully navigated an ongoing
challenging market backdrop, while taking significant strides
forward in terms of our offering, marketing capabilities and
profitability.
A core driver of our success is the
strength and breadth of the ActiveOps team, across our client
facing, technical and support teams. This is supported by the
robust culture that has been built by the senior leaders within the
Group and stems from Richard's vision for the Company as a
whole.
With a growing team and a dynamic
and market leading product set, we are confident that we have a
strong foundation on which to capitalise on the considerable
opportunity ahead.
Financial Performance
We have delivered another year of
profitable growth. I am particularly pleased with the double-digit
growth in SaaS revenue and ARR, 11% and 14% on a constant currency
basis respectively, demonstrating the underlying growth of the
business. The market backdrop for our Training and Implementation
(T&I) services continued to be challenging, with T&I
revenues decreasing in the year, somewhat tempering our overall
growth rate.
The Group's focus on measured
investment means adjusted EBITDA, profit before tax and cash all
show healthy progression on the prior year.
Importantly, our considerable step
forward in profitability and continued strong cash generation
provides the Group with increasing flexibility with regards to its
investment decisions, and as a Board we believe now is the right
time to accelerate investment into our sales engine, aiming to
drive an acceleration in our organic growth rate.
Overview of the year
The year has seen a particular focus
on delivering value to existing clients through the account teams,
and our success in this is evidenced by the maintenance of our
strong revenue retention at 110% on a constant currency
basis.
The investments we have made in our
product set continue to bear fruit, and our internal execution
capabilities have been evident this year in terms of the terrific
work in assisting clients to adopt ControliQ Series 3. This is the
latest iteration of our core product, giving clients access to
outstanding new features further bolstering their return on
investment, as well as allowing us to streamline our cost base.
Growth in our other new product CaseWorkiQ continues, with
customers praising its functionality in non-structured
environments.
Our expansion with existing
customers has been exceptional, however we feel that there is room
for improvement in terms of the pace of new customer acquisition.
While there has been a general extension of sales cycles in the
enterprise software environment, we had also identified in the
prior year that our marketing could be improved. In order to
address this, our marketing team has worked hard to refocus the
messaging around our products under the banner of Decision
Intelligence for service operations. This has led to a better
understanding of our space in the market and has been very
well-received by our customers.
During the year the board conducted
its annual review of strategy . It was very pleasing that the
conclusion is to continue on the current path, and to accelerate as
more profitability enables additional investment particularly in
go-to-market resources.
As part of this, we have made good
progress in establishing a leadership team, ready for the next
phase of expansion. Just before the end of the financial year, we
were delighted to announce the appointment of three senior hires
who bring invaluable experience and skills within their target
markets to further bolster our ability to grow and service the
global demand we are seeing for our solutions.
Diversity and ESG
The Board has worked diligently this
year to ensure our high standards are maintained and practiced in
line with the sound governance structures we have in
place.
We continue to adopt a formal
approach to managing and adopting our ESG agenda, aligning our
activities with the GRI framework and appropriately selected
standards from environmental, social, and economic and governance.
Over the last year, we've included an emphasis on training and
education across the firm, to ensure our teams are well equipped in
their roles and given the chance to grow with the
business.
In 2024 we have reviewed and refined
our environmental policy and added ESG requirements to our
management approach. We continue to assess our sustainability
practices and for 2025 we intend to be defining targets in this
area.
It was a busy year for the
nominations committee, and we were extremely pleased to welcome
Emma Salthouse as CFO, following the departures of Paddy Deller,
the long-term CFO and Ken Smith, who replaced him on an interim
basis. Emma has many prior years of experience with ActiveOps and
is making a notable difference to the running of the department.
Our thanks go to Ken for his fine contribution in helping bridge
the gap until Emma could take post.
I would like to acknowledge the
excellent work done by Mike McLaren in his leadership of the audit
committee over the past year, and particularly his work to change
our audit supplier to MHA. I have been very pleased with the way
they have engaged to drive a robust and constructive initial audit
process. My thanks to Hilary Wright who has provided great value
conducting an independent culture inspection, her guidance to the
ESG teams and her work leading the Remuneration
Committee.
As you will be aware, after 10 years
on the Board I have chosen not to stand for re-election at the next
AGM. I wish to thank my fellow Non-Executive Directors - past and
present - who I have worked with throughout my tenure. A special
thanks goes to Rebecca Hughes for her tireless work as Company
Secretary and General Counsel. During this time, we have progressed
through many major events and expanded globally. A particular high
point was the success of the IPO. I am incredibly proud of the way
ActiveOps has settled into the listed environment and continues to
deliver for its shareholders.
Finally, I would like to take this
opportunity to thank all our shareholders, past and present, who
have entrusted us to deliver returns on their investment and
continue to be supporters of the Group and what we are working to
achieve. I am excited to see what the future brings for this
business that is primed for further growth.
Looking Ahead
The Group's outlook remains strong
and the opportunity for growth is large. North America represents a
fantastic opportunity for us, we had some especially good wins in
Canada this year, and I believe with additional focus in the coming
period it can start to yield considerable improvement in terms of
contribution to the overall growth of the business.
Our APAC and South Africa regions
are showing great promise and Europe remains a well-proven market.
The continued expansion of our footprint within our existing client
estates demonstrates the strength of the regional teams and quality
of our product set.
With our cutting-edge AI powered new
features and excellent technical delivery, we are poised to be
increasingly successful. As the clarity of our Decision
Intelligence message informs the broader marketplace of our
capabilities and world class track record, we are experiencing more
understanding and insight from our prospects in the early stages of
the sales process.
ActiveOps has a proven area of
expertise, and there is plenty of scope to expand into new markets
and verticals. We have shown this with the continued success of our
land and expand strategy. Customers who test our products become
advocates and we can then rapidly install across the estate to
bring transformational value. This is a key reason for the Group's
ongoing success and will underpin its progress moving
forward.
Sean Finnan
Non-Executive Chair
CEO Statement
As we look back on FY24, and
consider the way ahead, we do so with an increased sense of
confidence. The investments into our product and marketing
capabilities are delivering demonstrable returns, particularly in
terms of strong expansion with existing customers and high
retention rates. The strength of our balance sheet and growth in
profitability means we are now well placed to invest into our
management structure and sales teams to replicate that success on a
wider basis, aiming to attract new customers and drive further
growth across all our key markets.
We describe our product proposition
under the banner 'Decision Intelligence for service operations',
focusing on clearly demonstrating that AI and Machine Learning (ML)
technologies are an integral part of our product set, and AI and ML
technologies give our customers the power to make the right
decisions, faster, enabling them to reduce costs, improve employee
wellbeing, release capacity and become more agile and resilient.
All of these are strategic imperatives at the board tables of our
target audience - raising awareness and interest in our
capabilities, and deal velocity as opportunities
develop.
We are excited by the fantastic
response to both this new messaging and our enhanced product
capabilities from our customer base and wider market, as evidenced
by the uptake of ControliQ Series 3 and the interest in the
forthcoming release of Series 4.
Of note this year, and in what we
see as a clear reflection of our position in the market, was the
winning of three ControliQ enterprise contracts, following
competitive RfP processes. ControliQ was chosen thanks to its
proven enterprise scale capabilities, the ease and speed of
integration and implementation, rapid ROI, our wider product set
and product roadmap.
We have made solid progress in
expanding our footprint across our target markets. Canada and South
Africa have both seen significant increases in ARR in the year; 29%
and 68% respectively under constant currency. We look forward to
building on this momentum following the recent hires we have made
across our senior leadership team, with the appointment of a Group
MD, APAC Regional MD and Regional Chair, South Africa. These hires
bring a vast wealth of experience and skills to help us build on
what we have already achieved across our key geographies since
IPO.
I am confident we are entering a new
phase of growth, underpinned by an increased investment in FY25 in
our sales teams, globally. We have created a market leading product
set and have a clear-cut position in the market, on which we are
excited to capitalise.
Continued Financial Progress
The business continues to benefit
from the strength of our SaaS business model, with the value we
provide our customers evident in the strength of our metrics. The
business delivered another year of double digit ARR growth,
increasing 11% (14% at constant currency) to £25.1m (2023: £22.6m),
providing us with good revenue visibility for the year ahead.
Across our extensive customer base, 60% of customers increased
their use of our software in the year, either expanding to new
teams and divisions, or adding new products, resulting in Net
Revenue Retention (NRR) on a constant currency remaining high at
110% (2023: 110%) with customer logo churn decreasing to 2.7%
(2023: 5.2%).
Total revenue increased 5% (9%
constant currency) to £26.8m, driven primarily by growth in our
SaaS revenues. Gross profit margins increased to 84% (2023: 82%)
and we have seen an increase in adjusted EBITDA to £2.4m (2023:
£0.7m) which includes an increase in the amount of capitalised
development due to our investments in new AI-based product
features. We benefit from inherent operational leverage in the
business, due to the scalable nature of our SaaS based offerings,
resulting in the business generating a sustainable profit before
tax of £1.0m (2023: loss before tax of £0.2m). Operating cash
conversion remains strong, at 175% of EBITDA (2023: 486%) and as a
result we closed the year with £17.6m of cash and cash investments
(2023: £15.4m) and no debt.
A
market that's increasingly aware of the problems we
solve
Meeting stakeholder expectations for
large, international service operations teams isn't getting any
easier. In fact, it is getting materially more complicated, with
leaders needing to manage new complexities such as remote working,
increasing regulation of operational risk coupled with the
emergence of AI in the workplace changing processes and their
competitive landscape. Manual reporting remains prevalent, and
every new system generates yet more siloed data, flooding
operations leaders with inactionable information. And yet the
effective delivery of service operations work requires instant
response, total transparency and zero contingency.
Operations leaders are realising
that in order to make the most of the data being generated across
their teams, they need access to this data to be smart, accurate
and highly predictive.
This is where our products and
Decision Intelligence come in. We take data from existing
applications and create insight relevant to the task of managing
operations. This produces consistent metrics up and down an
organisation giving operations leaders the precise and timely
information they need. Applying AI to this unique dataset allows us
to provide apps which automate decisions where appropriate or
augment leader's decisions by providing prescriptive insights.
These capabilities release the capacity of people, increase their
productivity and create the agility which ensures customer outcomes
are consistently delivered.
The ability of our products to blend
AI and human intelligence with information drawn from other
applications to deliver powerful actionable insights is resonating
more than ever. For example, determining staff skills from their
operational performance avoids the effort and inaccuracy of manual
assessment. Using this insight and applying AI to our
enterprise-wide datasets allows us to track and alert leaders to
opportunities for improvement, job enrichment and likely aptitude
in other processes. These capabilities mean less management effort
is needed and lead to materially better outcomes.
With tighter regulation and more
demanding clients requiring the best standards of service, all
within the context of tighter budgets, the demand for automation
and Decision Intelligence has never been stronger in the world of
operations; a demand we have clearly demonstrated our ability to
service.
Software development and innovation to meet the needs of our
customers
We are focused on developing and
delivering the products our customers need most and giving them the
tools to exploit the data they already have, to help them make
business critical decisions quickly and correctly. The result for
them is huge, with customers seeing an average capacity gain across
their service operations teams of around 20% in the first year. It
is this discipline and focus across our development and innovation
teams that underpins our market leading offering.
We have continued to deliver against
our clearly stated product roadmap. Through the data we have
collected over the last 15 years we have built a foundation that
has allowed for the roll out of AI and ML capabilities within our
products and this year we have delivered a major step change in the
ActiveOps software capability.
ControliQ
In the first half of the year, we
successfully introduced our new tiered licensing and pricing model
for ControliQ, including a series of offerings to enable customers
to select the level of capabilities that suit their needs, moving
through the series as their ambitions and requirements
increase.
The first to become available is
ControliQ Series 3, the most advanced iteration of the ControliQ
platform to date. ControliQ Series 3 is enhanced with additional
AI-based features, including Smart Planning which provides AI
driven forecasting, planning and service level management. We are
making good progress in transitioning our existing customer base
onto Series 3, generally at the point of renewal, which thanks to
the re-platforming work carried out in previous years is a
straightforward process.
Series 4 will be released in the
second half of 2024, which will include additional AI and ML based
features, including automatic skills cataloguing, a suite of new
senior leader insights and the Company's first app making use of
Generative AI; a virtual coach which predicts the interventions
required by operations leaders and can prescribe the best action to
take.
CaseWorkiQ
The uptake of CaseWorkiQ continues
to go to plan following its release last financial year, with
momentum continuing to build and we are pleased with its early
contribution to the Group. We have continued to look for ways to
improve and add to its capabilities while working closely and
collaboratively with clients, with the addition in the year of live
status dashboards, case flight-path tracking and anomaly detection.
These capabilities are now integrated with ControliQ, reducing
barriers to cross sell into existing customers.
We are delighted that 8 of our top
10 customers are now using the product with a total of 13 customers
using or trialling the solution. CaseWorkiQ ARR grew by 95% this
year and as at 31 March 2024, it contributed 7% to Group ARR, with
a healthy pipeline of future opportunities.
WorkiQ
This year saw the completion of the
Cloud delivered version of WorkiQ, making rollout faster across new
customers, decreasing cost of ownership and making the platform
more conducive for integration with our other products. All these
factors combine to improve customer experience and drive usage
across the product set.
Training and Implementation
T&I relates to implementation of
the SaaS solution and training in the Group's methodology on how to
use the solution to the best effect. This is typically delivered at
the start of a new customer relationship, or when a customer
expands the use of the Group's software into other parts of their
business. T&I services are client-lead and are designed around
the client's objectives and challenges. In FY24, T&I revenues
have been impacted due to customer expansions involving a higher
proportion of customers with in-house centre of excellences, and a
cyclical timing of customer refresh requirements.
Growth of our customer base: land &
expand
We estimate our total addressable
market within our target sectors and geographies being c.£900m per
annum, of which £90m relates to the cross and upsell of our
solutions to our existing customers. With an exit ARR of £25.1m at
year end, we have a sizeable runway for growth ahead of
us.
We remain focussed on expanding our
footprint in our existing customer base whilst delivering against
our customer acquisition strategy, which is tightly focussed on
banks, insurers and BPO providers in our target
geographies.
Despite the widely reported
elongation of corporate sales and contracting cycles, the Group
continued to win new customers in the year and secured significant
customer expansion deals, across all products and geographies. NRR
of 107% and record low levels of licence churn reflect the quality
of our products and the rapid ROI our clients see.
Internationally we have made
significant progress this year, with exciting growth in both Canada
and South Africa in particular. Having seen growing demand for our
solutions in Canada, this year we opened a Toronto office in,
launched a French-Canadian version of our core offering and were
delighted to secure ControliQ wins with two major Canadian banking
organisations. We now count four of the six major Canadian banks as
customers, each with considerable expansion potential. In South
Africa ARR increased by 68% in constant currency during the year,
fuelled by successful expansion of existing customer relationships,
whilst the pipeline for the coming year was also significantly
strengthened. Whilst growth in EMEIA was steady, the rate of growth
was impacted with a challenging backdrop of T&I revenue.
Australia was impacted by a slow conversion of sales pipeline and
currency impacts.
We saw the first significant
Microsoft Azure Marketplace transaction this year, validating this
as an exciting new sales channel for the Group. We're excited to
see an increase in interest in transacting via the Azure
marketplace in the pipeline in addition to an increase in joint
marketing with Microsoft. The relationship has also accelerated a
number of our deals this year through access to customer
stakeholders and overcoming technical hurdles.
Increased investment Marketing delivering
returns
Following the investment in our
product development teams, a key initial phase in our next stage of
growth post IPO, and acknowledging that our marketing approach
could be improved, we invested in our marketing team, led by
Bhavesh Vaghela who drove our effort to relaunch our proposition
under Decision Intelligence. The result of this investment is now
being seen in a significant increase in the quality of sales leads
within our pipeline. This includes inbound and outbound sales leads
as awareness around our products and the benefits they bring
becomes clearer.
We have also introduced our
OpsTracker market report, Ops Game-Changers podcast series and
launched a joint AI research project with Henley Business School,
to increase our authority of voice in the space. We also expanded
our conference and awards programme to cover all our key
territories.
Post year end we were delighted to
announce our strategic and global partnership with Great Britain's
men's and women's Rugby Sevens, as their Official Analytics
partner. This is an exciting step for the Group and will increase
brand awareness across a large audience, many of whom will work in
the organisations we work with.
Increasing investment in Sales in FY25
Following delivery of the first two
phases of our growth strategy, Product and Marketing investment, we
now turn to the third; investment in our sales team to harness the
opportunity that has been created by the success of the first two
phases of investment in the form of a healthy sales
pipeline.
We are confident that our products
and their position in the market have never been clearer, and we
have a real opportunity to exploit this. In line with our strategy
to date and commitment to maintaining the recently achieved
profitability, we will be disciplined and focused in our approach
to investment in the sales team, adding capacity where we see the
clearest opportunities. In line with usual training timelines, we
would expect this investment to start materially impacting the
growth of the business in FY26.
Focus for the year ahead
Looking to the year ahead, the
business has a well-defined and resourced set of priorities to
maintain the excellent progress of last year.
We will continue to use our Decision
Intelligence positioning to create pull from tech and analytics
people as well as operations teams, while continuing to invest in
initiatives which grow brand recognition and demonstrate ActiveOps
authority in the space.
We have an exciting pipeline of new
AI enhanced features set to be released in the new financial year,
each of which will significantly enhance our customers'
capabilities and experience within the platform.
In line with our commitment to
continually delivering more for our customers we will be offering
customers a range of implementation journeys and approaches to
allow them to scale at the pace they desire.
Finally, and most importantly, while
maintaining our track record of expansion across our existing base,
we are focused on accelerating the acquisition of key new logos and
growth in both the APAC and North America regions, where we are
seeing large opportunities to expand.
Confident Outlook
Trading in the first few months of
FY25 has been in line with Board expectations, driven by continued
expansion within our existing customers and the addition of a new
North American insurance customer with significant expansion
potential. Our high levels of ARR, and growing number of well
qualified sales leads gives the Board confidence to make
disciplined and focused investment in the global sales operation in
the coming year to provide us with the capacity to drive our
organic growth rate. We are confident our exciting product roadmap,
including further AI and ML features, will continue to drive
increased interest from across our customer base and prospects and
look forward to updating investors on further progress in the year
ahead.
Richard Jeffery
Group Chief Executive
Officer
Group Financial Performance and
Chief Financial Officer's Report
|
|
|
|
SaaS £000
|
T&I
£000
|
Total £000
|
SaaS
£000
|
T&I
£000
|
Total
£000
|
Revenue
|
23,785
|
2,989
|
26,774
|
22,058
|
3,401
|
25,459
|
Cost of Sales
|
(3,084)
|
(1,219)
|
(4,303)
|
(3,411)
|
(1,268)
|
(4,679)
|
Gross Margin
|
20,701
|
1,770
|
22,471
|
18,647
|
2,133
|
20,780
|
I am pleased to report on a strong
year for the Group with revenue growth of 9% on a constant currency
basis, delivering total revenue of £26.8m (2023: £25.5m). The Group
achieved an exciting milestone during year, by delivering a
sustainable Profit before Tax. This is expected to continue as the
Group begins to benefit from the operational leverage in the
business model.
Revenue
Total revenue of £26.8m (2023:
£25.5m) was 5% ahead of prior year (9% ahead on constant currency),
with software and subscription revenues increasing 8% to £23.8m
(2023: £22.1) arising from both new and existing customers. Revenue
growth was strong with EMEIA growing total revenues by 9% to £15.2m
(2023: £13.9m) and North America by 6% to £6.4m (2023:
£6.0m).
Training and Implementation
(T&I) revenues have marginally reduced to £3.0m (2023: £3.4m)
alongside a challenging backdrop for T&I. T&I revenues
continue to vary by product and region depending on the mix of
customer implementation requirements as well as the timing of
implementations dictated by customer plans. T&I revenues in the
second half of the year performed stronger following a slow start
to the year.
Annual Recurring Revenue
Annual Recurring Revenue of £25.1m
(2023: £22.6m) was 11% higher (14% on constant currency) than the
prior year as a result of sales to existing customers, and the
addition of 3 new customers generating ARR of £0.8m at the year
end, with the opportunity to contribute further in FY25. Net
Revenue Retention (NRR) of existing customers on a constant
currency was 110% (2023: 110%) with customer logo churn decreasing
to 2.7% (2023: 5.2%).
Margins and Operating Profit
Gross profit margins of 84% (2023:
82%) have improved primarily due to a higher proportion of SaaS
revenues versus the prior year. SaaS gross profit margins have
increased to 87% (2023: 85%) due to prudent cost management.
T&I gross profit margins have reduced to 59% (2023: 63%), with
the prior year benefiting from a significant high margin refresh
programme for a major customer.
Operating expenses (excluding
share-based payments, depreciation and amortisation) remained flat
at £19.9m (2023: £19.9m). Whilst investment will continue to
support growth, the rate of required investment has slowed versus
prior years and the business has started to see the benefits of the
operational leverage inherent in the business model.
Following the expansion of the
Group's R&D capabilities in prior years, the Group continues to
focus on the development of advanced AI-based product features
within ControliQ and CaseWorkiQ. The Group capitalised internal
labour of £1.3m (2023: £0.9m).
Supported by the continued
investment in Marketing, the Group launched its value-based
customer proposition, Decision Intelligence, during the year.
Decision Intelligence solutions capture and enrich your operations
data to power AI apps which enable leaders to make better
decisions, and to do so faster, which is delivering an increase in
high-quality leads. This, coupled with a focused project to revise
the tiering of current and future features within the licensing
structure, is expected to deliver increased ARR in the current
financial year and beyond.
Adjusted EBITDA increased to £2.4m
(2023: £0.7m) excluding the costs associated with share-based
payments at £0.2m (2023: £0.03m) and translation reserve loss of
£0.1m (2023: loss £0.2m).
Product and Technology Expenditure
Total expenditure on product
management, research, development and support in the year
marginally increased to £5.5m (2023: £5.4m) excluding
capitalisation of labour. This investment has enabled the group to
deliver several new features to the product set to provide
additional benefit to customers. Development costs of £1.3m (2023:
£0.9m) were capitalised during the year relating to new features
incorporated into ControliQ and CaseWorkiQ.
Long-Term Incentive Plan (LTIP) charges
During the year the income statement
charge for the LTIP schemes was £0.2m (2023: £0.03m). This includes
the costs for the 2022 and 2023 scheme, which was offset by a
reversal of £0.3m relating to the reassessment of the non-market
conditions.
There was a reversal of £0.4m in
relation to market conditions not being met relating to the 2021
scheme which has been adjusted through retained earnings and is not
included in the LTIP charge.
Foreign Exchange
The Group has 50% (2023: 48%) of
revenues invoiced in currencies other than GBP, with the Group's
cost base predominantly located in the same base jurisdictions as
revenues, providing a natural hedge to currency exchange risk.
Movements on exchange rates throughout the year represent a
negative movement of £0.9m relating to revenue a positive impact of
£0.9m relating to costs and a negative impact of £0.2m relating to
the translation of foreign currencies held in bank
accounts.
Depreciation and Amortisation
Depreciation and amortisation of
£1.3m (2023: £1.0m) principally comprised intangible amortisation
following the acquisition of the OpenConnect entity in 2019 and the
assets retained from the subsequent sale in 2020, and acquisition
of the Australian entities in 2017.
Taxation
The Group had a tax charge in the
year of £0.1m (2023: £0.3m). The Group operates a transfer pricing
policy to ensure that profits are correctly recorded in each of the
jurisdictions in which it operates. ActiveOps has brought forward
tax losses in the UK and Irish legal entities that currently reduce
the overall tax rate of the business.
Statutory Results
The Group reported total
comprehensive income of £0.7m (2023 loss £0.7m) for the
year.
Earnings per Share
Following the Group's move to making
a profit before tax, the profit attributable to equity shareholders
basic earnings per share for continuing operations was a profit of
1.18p (2023: loss 0.70p). The diluted earnings per share for the
year was a profit of 1.12p (2023: loss 0.67p).
Dividend
The Board has determined that no
dividend will be paid in the year. The Group is primarily seeking
to achieve capital growth for shareholders at this time. It is the
Board's intention during the current phase of the Group's
development to retain distributable profits from the business to
the extent they are generated.
Balance Sheet
The Group has a strong balance sheet
position with no debt and net assets of £8.8m (2023: £7.9m)
including cash and cash equivalents of £11.4m at the end of the
year (2023: £12.3m) and cash investments of £6.3m (2023:
£3.0m).
Goodwill and intangible assets
The carrying value of the Group's
goodwill of £1.2m (2023: £1.2m) was reviewed for impairment with no
indications of impairment. The intangible assets at £4.6m (2023:
£4.5m) arising from business combinations for customer
relationships, purchased software and capitalised development costs
are amortised over an appropriate period.
Cash flow
The Group continues to generate
positive working capital with the ratio of operating cashflow to
EBITDA at 175% for the year (2023: 486%).
The Group continued to bill most
customers annually in advance for software revenues with deferred
income increasing to £14.4m (2023: £13.5m). The seasonality of
existing contract customer renewals in the second half of the year
delivered a strong increase in cash over the period.
Emma Salthouse
Chief Financial Officer
Consolidated statement of profit and loss and other
comprehensive income
for the year ended 31 March
2024
Year ended 31 March
|
Notes
|
2024
£000
|
2023
£000
|
Revenue
|
4
|
26,774
|
25,459
|
Cost of sales
|
5
|
(4,303)
|
(4,679)
|
Gross profit
|
|
22,471
|
20,780
|
Administrative expense excluding
share option charges, depreciation and amortisation
|
|
(19,939)
|
(19,935)
|
Administrative expenses - share
option charges only
|
|
(227)
|
(27)
|
Administrative expenses -
depreciation and amortisation only
|
7,
8
|
(1,267)
|
(1,035)
|
Total administrative expenses
|
|
(21,433)
|
(20,997)
|
Impairment losses on financial
assets and contract assets
|
7,
10
|
(183)
|
-
|
Operating profit/(loss)
|
|
855
|
(217)
|
Finance income
|
|
166
|
49
|
Financing cost
|
|
(34)
|
(62)
|
Profit/(loss) before taxation
|
|
987
|
(230)
|
Taxation
|
6
|
(142)
|
(267)
|
Profit/(loss) for the year
|
|
845
|
(497)
|
|
|
|
|
Other comprehensive income
|
|
|
|
Items that may be subsequently
reclassified to profit or loss:
|
|
|
|
Exchange differences on translating
foreign operations
|
|
(136)
|
(181)
|
Total comprehensive profit/(loss) for the year attributable to
the owners of the parent company
|
|
709
|
(678)
|
|
|
|
|
Basic and diluted earnings/(loss) per share
|
|
|
|
Basic earnings per share
|
|
1.18p
|
(0.70p)
|
Diluted earnings per share
|
|
1.13p
|
(0.67p)
|
Consolidated statement of financial position
as at 31 March 2024
At 31 March
|
Notes
|
2024
£000
|
2023
Restated
£000
|
Non-current assets
|
|
|
|
Intangible assets
|
7
|
5,794
|
5,735
|
Property, plant and
equipment
|
8
|
221
|
162
|
Right of use assets
|
9
|
301
|
419
|
Deferred tax assets
|
6
|
174
|
217
|
Total non-current assets
|
|
6,490
|
6,533
|
|
|
|
|
Current assets
|
|
|
|
Trade and other
receivables
|
10
|
5,939
|
6,373
|
Cash investments
|
11
|
6,253
|
3,037
|
Cash and cash equivalents
|
|
11,353
|
12,340
|
Total current assets
|
|
23,545
|
21,750
|
|
|
|
|
Total assets
|
|
30,035
|
28,283
|
|
|
|
|
Equity
|
|
|
|
Share capital
|
|
71
|
71
|
Share premium account
|
|
6,048
|
6,048
|
Merger relief reserve
|
|
396
|
396
|
Share option reserve
|
|
384
|
593
|
Foreign exchange reserve
|
|
(360)
|
(224)
|
Retained earnings
|
|
2,264
|
983
|
Total equity
|
|
8,803
|
7,867
|
|
|
|
|
Non-Current liabilities
|
|
|
|
Lease liabilities
|
9
|
239
|
364
|
Provisions
|
|
201
|
102
|
Deferred tax liabilities
|
|
691
|
889
|
Total non-current liabilities
|
|
1,131
|
1,355
|
|
|
|
|
Current liabilities
|
|
|
|
Trade and other payables
|
|
19,963
|
18,860
|
Lease liabilities
|
9
|
69
|
100
|
Corporation tax payable
|
|
69
|
101
|
Total current liabilities
|
|
20,101
|
19,061
|
|
|
|
|
Total equity and liabilities
|
|
30,035
|
28,283
|
Consolidated statement of cash flows
for the year ended 31 March
2024
Year ended 31 March
|
Notes
|
2024
£000
|
2023
Restated
£000
|
Profit/(loss) after tax
|
|
845
|
(497)
|
Taxation
|
|
142
|
267
|
Finance income
|
|
(166)
|
(49)
|
Finance expense
|
|
34
|
62
|
Operating profit/(loss)
|
|
855
|
(217)
|
|
|
|
|
Adjustments for:
|
|
|
|
Depreciation of property, plant and
equipment
|
8
|
117
|
127
|
Depreciation of right of use
asset
|
9
|
137
|
142
|
Amortisation of intangible
assets
|
7
|
1,013
|
766
|
Impairment of intangible
asset
|
7
|
218
|
-
|
Share option charge
|
|
227
|
27
|
Change in trade and other
receivables
|
10
|
434
|
(2,619)
|
Change in trade and other payables
and provisions
|
|
1,202
|
5,168
|
Cash from operations
|
|
4,203
|
3,394
|
Interest paid
|
|
(20)
|
(25)
|
Taxation paid
|
|
(335)
|
(284)
|
Net
cash generated from operating activities
|
|
3,848
|
3,085
|
|
|
|
|
Investing activities
|
|
|
|
Purchase of property, plant and
equipment
|
8
|
(179)
|
(90)
|
Purchase of software
|
|
(9)
|
(40)
|
Capitalisation of development
costs
|
|
(1,347)
|
(851)
|
Interest received
|
|
166
|
49
|
Net cash investments
|
|
(3,216)
|
(3,037)
|
Net
cash used in investing activities
|
|
(4,585)
|
(3,969)
|
|
|
|
|
Financing activities
|
|
|
|
Repayment of capital element of
lease liabilities
|
|
(155)
|
(173)
|
Interest paid in respect of
leases
|
|
(14)
|
(37)
|
Net
cash used in financing activities
|
|
(169)
|
(210)
|
|
|
|
|
Net change in cash and cash
equivalents
|
|
(906)
|
(1,094)
|
Cash and cash equivalents at
beginning of the year
|
|
12,340
|
13,753
|
Effect of foreign exchange on cash
and cash equivalents
|
|
(81)
|
(319)
|
Cash and cash equivalents at end of the year
|
|
11,353
|
12,340
|
Consolidated statement of changes in equity
for the year ended 31 March
2024
Year ended 31 March
|
Share
capital
£000
|
Share
premium
£000
|
Merger
relief reserve
£000
|
Share
option reserve
£000
|
Foreign
exchange reserve
£000
|
Retained
earnings
£000
|
Total
£000
|
At
1 April 2022 - Reported
|
71
|
6,444
|
-
|
566
|
(43)
|
1,480
|
8,518
|
Prior Year Adjustment
|
-
|
(396)
|
396
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
At
1 April 2022 - Restated
|
71
|
6,048
|
396
|
566
|
(43)
|
1,480
|
8,518
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Loss for the year
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(497)
|
(497)
|
Exchange differences on translating
foreign operations
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(181)
|
-
|
(181)
|
Total comprehensive loss for the year
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(181)
|
(497)
|
(678)
|
Transactions with owners, recorded directly in
equity
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Share based payment
charge
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
27
|
-
|
-
|
27
|
Total transactions with owners
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
27
|
-
|
-
|
27
|
At
31 March 2023
|
71
|
6,048
|
396
|
593
|
(224)
|
983
|
7,867
|
Year ended 31 March
|
Share
capital
£000
|
Share
premium
£000
|
Merger Relief
Reserve
£000
|
Share option
reserve
£000
|
Foreign exchange
reserve
£000
|
Retained
earnings
£000
|
Total
£000
|
At
1 April 2023
|
71
|
6,048
|
396
|
593
|
(224)
|
983
|
7,867
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Profit for the year
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
845
|
845
|
Exchange differences on translating
foreign operations
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(136)
|
-
|
(136)
|
Total comprehensive profit/(loss) for the
year
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(136)
|
845
|
709
|
Transactions with owners, recorded directly in
equity
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Reserve transfer on exercising of
share options
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(436)
|
-
|
436
|
-
|
Share based payment
charge
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
227
|
-
|
-
|
227
|
Total transactions with owners
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(209)
|
-
|
436
|
227
|
At
31 March 2024
|
71
|
6,048
|
396
|
384
|
(360)
|
2,264
|
8,803
|
Notes forming part of the financial
statements
for the year ended 31 March
2024
1. General information
ActiveOps plc (the 'Company') is a
public company limited by shares incorporated and domiciled in
England and Wales. The registered office and principal place of
business is One Valpy, 20 Valpy Street, Reading, Berkshire, RG1
1AR. On the 17 March 2021 the company became a public limited
company, having formerly been known as ActiveOps
Limited.
The Company, together with its
subsidiary undertakings (the 'Group') is principally engaged in the
provision of hosted operations management Software as a Service
('SaaS') solutions to industry leading companies around the
world.
2. Accounting policies
a) Basis of preparation
The principal accounting policies
adopted in the preparation of the consolidated financial statements
are set out below. The policies have been consistently applied to
all the years presented, unless otherwise stated.
The financial statements of the
Group have been prepared on a going concern basis under the
historical cost convention, except where otherwise stated within
the accounting policies, and in accordance with International
Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS), and with the requirements of
the Companies Act 2006 as applicable to Companies reporting under
those standards. The financial statements are presented in pound
sterling.
The preparation of financial
statements in compliance with IFRS requires the use of certain
critical accounting estimates. It also requires Group management to
exercise judgment in applying the Group's accounting policies. The
areas where significant judgements and estimates have been made in
preparing the financial statements and their effect are disclosed
in note 3.
During the year management have
identified prior year restatements in relation to equity and cash
investments. Further details of these restatements can be found in
note 24 to the consolidated financial statements.
The financial information set out
above does not constitute the Company's Annual Report and Accounts
for the year ended 31 March 2024. The Annual Report and Accounts
for 2023 have been delivered to the Registrar of Companies and
those for 2024 will be delivered shortly. The auditor's report for
the Group and Company's 2024 Annual Report and Accounts was
unqualified.
Whilst the financial information
included in this results announcement has been prepared in
accordance with UK adopted international accounting standards in
conformity with the requirements of the Companies Act 2006, this
announcement does not itself contain sufficient information to
comply with UK adopted international accounting
standards.
b) Going Concern
The financial statements have been
prepared on a going concern basis, which assumes that the Group
will continue to operate and meet its liabilities as they fall due
for the foreseeable future, being a period of at least 12 months
from the date of approval of the financial statements.
The Directors have prepared detailed
financial forecasts and cash flows looking three years from the
date of these consolidated financial statements. In developing
these forecasts, the Directors have made assumptions based upon
their view of the current and future economic conditions that will
prevail over the forecast period.
On the basis of the above
projections, the Directors are confident that the Group has
sufficient working capital and available funds to honour all of its
obligations to creditors as and when they fall due. In reaching
this conclusion, the Directors have considered the current strong
levels of cash and cash equivalents, lack of external funding
arrangements and its forecasted cash headroom. The Directors have
considered the resources available to the Group and the potential
impact of changes in forecast growth, severe but plausible downside
scenarios and other assumptions, including the potential to avoid
or defer certain costs and to reduce discretionary spend as
mitigating actions in the event of such changes. Accordingly, the
Directors continue to adopt the going concern basis in preparing
these consolidated financial statements.
c) New accounting standards and interpretations not yet
mandatory or early adopted
Accounting Standards that have
recently been issued or amended but are not yet mandatory, have not
been early adopted by the Group for the annual reporting year ended
31 March 2024. No new accounting standards were implemented in the
year.
d) Basis of consolidation
Subsidiaries are entities controlled
by the Group. The Group controls a group when it is exposed to, or
has rights to, variable returns from its involvement with the
subsidiary and has the ability to affect those returns through its
power over the subsidiary. In assessing control, the Group takes
into consideration potential voting rights. The acquisition date is
the date on which control is transferred to the acquirer. The
financial statements of subsidiaries are included in the
consolidated financial statements from the date that control
commences until the date that control ceases.
Intra-Group balances and
transactions, and any unrealised income and expenses arising from
intra-Group transactions, are eliminated.
e) Revenue
The Group's revenues consist
primarily of SaaS solutions and Training and Implementation
revenues ('T&I').
SaaS solutions are sold as both a
cloud IT environment or as an on-premise solution which can be
hosted within a customer's server. Alongside the software, the
Group provides ongoing management services contracts which involves
ongoing support of the software. This support is typically achieved
by accessing the software to ensure it is operating efficiently and
to make changes as requested by the customer. The licence and
associated management services contract are considered to be a
single performance obligation because although the customer obtains
possession of the software, they are unable to benefit from the
software solution without the associated management
services.
SaaS solutions, both hosted and
on-premise, are recognised on a straight-line basis over the length
of the contract during which the customer has daily access to these
services.
T&I relates to implementation of
the SaaS solution and training in the Group's methodology on how to
use the solution to the best effect. This is typically delivered at
the start of a new customer relationship, or when a customer
expands the use of the Group's software into other parts of their
business. Ad-hoc training is also provided to existing customers.
T&I is a single performance obligation.
T&I services are recognised over
time based upon the delivery of the service. Variable and
contingent consideration exists in T&I revenues for some
customers typically dependent on the customer achieving a level of
efficiency due to the purchase of the Group's software and methods.
Management agrees with the customer the expected amount of
productivity gain and the associated contingent revenue with the
customer at the outset of the contract, based upon an initial
health check of the customers operations. Management considers the
likelihood of the efficiency being achieved given what is
discovered in the initial health check and past performance of the
Group's products with other customers, and if the gain is
considered to be probable the variable revenue is recognised
alongside the non-variable T&I revenue. If the gain is not
initially thought to be probable, then the revenue is only
recognised once the efficiency improvements demonstrate that the
targets are likely to be achieved. At present this isn't a
significant judgement as it applies to a relatively small amount of
revenues and the efficiency targets have, historically, been
achieved.
Both SaaS performance obligations
are provided under fixed-price contracts, which is mainly
contracted as a fixed price for a period of time for up to a
contractual number of users, but also can be achieved via a price
per user, where the number of actual users is determined in
arrears. SaaS contracts are typically for a period of one year.
Where the number of users is determined in arrears, a best estimate
of the expected revenue is accrued each month based upon recent
usage.
Revenue has been allocated between
performance obligations using stand-alone selling prices. Most
sales are only for one performance obligation, as customers who
remain with the Group over many years do not usually require
additional T&I. Equally T&I is sold at daily rates that are
comparable to third party training providers who run management
courses or similar for organisations that are comparable to the
broad customer base of the Group. Any non-trivial variation from
the total cost of a sale of both performance obligations when
compared to standalone prices and external providers prices are
applied on a pro rata basis to the agreed sales price with the
customer to determine the split between the two performance
obligations.
The IFRS 15 practical expedient that
an entity need not adjust the promised amount of consideration for
the effects of a significant financing component if the entity
expects, at contract inception, that the period between when the
entity transfers a promised good or service to a customer and when
the customer pays for that good or service will be one year or less
has been applied. That an entity may recognise the incremental
costs of obtaining a contract as an expense when incurred if the
amortisation period of the asset that the entity otherwise would
have recognised is one year or less has also been
applied.
No financing cost has been
considered to be part of the revenue due to the duration of the
performance obligations lasting for one year or less. Warranty
fixes are provided as required within the agreed services of the
SaaS solutions performance obligations. These are assurance-type
warranties (i.e. a product guarantee) and so are not separate
performance obligations.
In the case of fixed-price
contracts, the customer pays the fixed amount based on a payment
schedule. If the services rendered by the Group exceed the payment,
a contract asset is recognised. If the payments exceed the services
rendered, a contract liability is recognised. Contract assets and
liabilities are recognised within 'prepayments and accrued income'
and 'accruals and deferred income' respectively.
f) Foreign currency
Transactions in foreign currencies
are translated to the respective functional currencies of Group
entities at the foreign exchange rate ruling at the date of the
transaction. Monetary assets and liabilities denominated in foreign
currencies at the balance sheet date are retranslated to the
functional currency at the foreign exchange rate ruling at that
date. Foreign exchange differences arising on translation are
recognised in the Statement of Comprehensive Income. Non-monetary
assets and liabilities that are measured in terms of historical
cost in a foreign currency are translated using the exchange rate
at the date of the transaction. Non-monetary assets and liabilities
denominated in foreign currencies that are stated at fair value are
retranslated to the functional currency at foreign exchange rates
ruling at the dates the fair value was determined.
The assets and liabilities of
foreign operations, including goodwill and fair value adjustments
arising on consolidation, are translated to the Group's
presentational currency, sterling, at foreign exchange rates ruling
at the balance sheet date. The revenues and expenses of foreign
operations are translated at an average rate for the period where
this rate approximates to the foreign exchange rates ruling at the
dates of the transactions.
Exchange differences arising from
this translation of foreign operations are reported as an item of
other comprehensive income and accumulated in the translation
reserve or non-controlling interest, as the case may be. When a
foreign operation is disposed of, such that control, joint control
or significant influence (as the case may be) is lost, the entire
accumulated amount in the translation reserve, net of amounts
previously attributed to non-controlling interests, is recycled to
the Statement of Comprehensive Income as part of the gain or loss
on disposal.
g) Classification of instruments issued by the
Group
Instruments issued by the Group are
treated as equity (i.e., forming part of shareholders' funds) only
to the extent that they meet the following two
conditions:
• They include no
contractual obligations upon the Group to deliver cash or other
financial assets or to exchange financial assets or financial
liabilities with another party under conditions that are
potentially unfavourable to the Group; and
• Where the instrument
will or may be settled in the Company's own equity instruments, it
is either a non-derivative that includes no obligation to deliver a
variable number of the Company's own equity instruments or is a
derivative that will be settled by the Company exchanging a fixed
amount of cash or other financial assets for a fixed number of its
own equity instruments.
To the extent that this definition
is not met, the items are classified as a financial
liability.
Finance payments associated with
financial liabilities are dealt with as part of finance expenses.
Finance payments associated with financial instruments that are
classified in equity are dividends and are recorded directly in
equity.
Where a financial instrument that
contains both equity and financial liability components exists
these components are separated and accounted for individually under
the above policy.
h) Financial instruments
Recognition and derecognition
Financial assets and financial
liabilities are recognised when the Group becomes a party to the
contractual provisions of the financial instrument.
Financial assets are derecognised
when the contractual rights to the cash flows from the financial
asset expire or have been transferred, or when the financial asset
and substantially all the risks and rewards are transferred. A
financial liability is derecognised when it is extinguished,
discharged, cancelled or expires.
A.
Financial Assets
Classification and initial
measurement of financial assets:
Financial assets, other than those
designated and effective as hedging instruments, are classified
into the following categories:
• Amortised
cost
• Fair value through
profit or loss ('FVTPL')
• Fair value through
other comprehensive income ('FVOCI').
All income and expenses relating to
financial assets that are recognised in profit or loss are
presented within finance costs, finance income or other financial
items, except for impairment of trade receivables which is
presented within other expenses.
Subsequent measurement of financial assets
Financial assets are measured at
amortised cost if the assets meet the following conditions (and are
not designated as FVTPL):
• They are held within a
business model whose objective is to hold the financial assets and
collect its contractual cash flows.
• The contractual terms
of the financial assets give rise to cash flows that are solely
payments of principal and interest on the principal amount
outstanding.
After initial recognition, these are
measured at amortised cost using the effective interest method.
Discounting is omitted where the effect of discounting is
immaterial. The Group's cash and cash equivalents and cash
investments, trade and most other receivables fall into this
category of financial instruments.
Impairment of financial assets
IFRS 9's impairment requirements use
forward-looking information to recognise expected credit losses -
the 'expected credit loss (ECL) model'.
The Group considers a broader range
of information when assessing credit risk and measuring expected
credit losses, including past events, current conditions, and
reasonable and supportable forecasts that affect the expected
collectability of the future cash flows of the
instrument.
In applying this forward-looking
approach, a distinction is made between:
• financial instruments
that have not deteriorated significantly in credit quality since
initial recognition or that have low credit risk ('Stage 1');
and
• financial instruments
that have deteriorated significantly in credit quality since
initial recognition and whose credit risk is not low ('Stage
2').
• 'Stage 3' would cover
financial assets that have objective evidence of impairment at the
reporting date.
'12-month expected credit losses'
are recognised for the first category while 'lifetime expected
credit losses' are recognised for the second category.
Measurement of the expected credit
losses is determined by a probability-weighted estimate of credit
losses over the expected life of the financial
instrument.
Trade and other receivables
The Group makes use of a simplified
approach in accounting for trade and other receivables and records
the loss allowance as lifetime expected credit losses. These are
the expected shortfalls in contractual cash flows, considering the
potential for default at any point during the life of the financial
instrument. In calculating, the Group uses its historical
experience, external indicators and forward-looking information to
calculate the expected credit losses.
The Group does not have a history of
material credit losses on its trade receivables and no change to
this is expected when considering forward looking
information.
B.
Financial Liabilities
Classification and measurement of
financial liabilities:
The Group's financial liabilities
include trade payables and other payables.
Financial liabilities are initially
measured at fair value, and, where applicable, adjusted for
transaction costs unless the Group designated a financial liability
at fair value through profit or loss.
Subsequently, financial liabilities
are measured at amortised cost using the effective interest
method.
All interest-related charges and, if
applicable, changes in an instrument's fair value that are reported
in profit or loss are included within finance costs or finance
income.
i) Property, plant and equipment
Property, plant and equipment are
stated at cost less accumulated depreciation and accumulated
impairment losses.
Where parts of an item of property,
plant and equipment have different useful lives, they are accounted
for as separate items of property, plant and equipment.
Depreciation is charged to
administrative expenses in the Statement of Comprehensive Income.
The principal annual rates used for this purpose are:
• Leasehold improvements
- straight line over 3 years.
• Plant and machinery -
straight line over 3 years.
• Furniture, fittings
and equipment - straight line over 5 years.
• Right of use assets -
straight line over the earlier of useful life of the right of use
asset or the lease term.
Depreciation methods, useful lives
and residual values are reviewed at each balance sheet
date.
j) Leases
The Group has applied IFRS 16
throughout the financial statements. At inception of a contract,
the Group assesses whether a contract is, or contains, a lease. A
contract is, or contains, a lease if the contract conveys the right
to control the use of an identified asset for a period of time in
exchange for consideration.
The Group recognises a Right of Use
(ROU) asset and a lease liability at the lease commencement date.
The ROU asset is initially measured at cost, which comprises the
initial amount of the lease liability adjusted for any lease
payments made at or before the commencement date, plus any initial
direct costs incurred and an estimate of costs to restore the
underlying asset, less any lease incentives received.
The ROU asset is subsequently
depreciated using the straight-line method from the commencement
date to the earlier of the end of the useful life of the ROU asset
or the end of the lease term. In addition, the ROU asset is
periodically reduced by impairment losses, if any, and adjusted for
certain remeasurements of the lease liabilities. Depreciation is
charged to administrative expenses in the Statement of
Comprehensive Income.
The lease liability is initially
measured at the present value of the lease payments that are not
paid at the commencement date, discounted using the interest rate
implicit in the lease or, if that rate cannot be readily
determined, the Group's incremental borrowing rate. The Group uses
its incremental borrowing rate as the discount rate.
The lease liability is measured at
amortised cost using the effective interest method. It is
remeasured when there is a change in future lease payments arising
from a change in an index or rate, if there is a change in the
Group's estimate of the amount expected to be payable under a
residual value guarantee or if the Group changes its assessment of
whether it will exercise a purchase, extension or termination
option.
When the lease liability is
remeasured in this way, a corresponding adjustment is made to the
carrying amount of the ROU asset or is recorded in profit or loss
if the carrying value of the ROU asset has been reduced to
zero.
The Group presents ROU assets and
lease liabilities separately from property, plant and
equipment.
Short term leases and low value assets
The Group has elected not to
recognise ROU assets and lease liabilities for short-term leases of
machinery and office spaces that have a lease term of 12 months or
less and leases of low-value assets, including IT equipment. The
Group recognises the lease payments associated with these leases as
an expense on a straight-line basis over the lease term. There are
several property leases in the Group on a one-month rolling
contract. These are treated as short-life assets and are recognised
on a straight-line basis.
k) Intangible assets and goodwill
Goodwill
Goodwill is stated at cost less any
accumulated impairment losses. Goodwill is allocated to
cash-generating units ('CGU') for the purposes of impairment
testing, and is not amortised but is tested annually for
impairment.
Other intangible assets
Expenditure on internally generated
goodwill and brands is recognised in the Statement of Comprehensive
Income as an expense as incurred.
Other intangible assets that are
acquired by the group are stated at cost less accumulated
amortisation and accumulated impairment losses.
Internally generated intangible
assets are recognised where it is probable that there will be
future economic benefits from the asset, the cost can be reliably
measured, the completion of the intangible asset so that it will be
available for sale is technically feasible, and there is intention
and ability to complete and sell the intangible asset.
Amortisation is charged to the
administrative expenses in the Statement of Comprehensive Income on
a straight-line basis over the estimated useful lives of intangible
assets unless such lives are indefinite. Intangible assets with an
indefinite useful life and goodwill are systematically tested for
impairment at each balance sheet date. The Group has no assets with
indefinite lives, other than Goodwill, throughout the reporting
periods.
Other intangible assets are
amortised from the date they are available for use. The estimated
useful lives are as follows:
• Customer relationships
- 10 years straight line.
• Purchased software - 3
years straight line.
• Intellectual property
rights acquired on acquisition - 3 years straight line.
• Development costs - 5
years straight line.
The estimated useful lives are
derived from management's judgement of the expected life of the
asset. Useful lives are reconsidered at least every financial
year-end, or sooner if circumstances relating to the asset change
or if there is an indication that the initial estimate requires
revision.
l) Impairment
Financial assets (including receivables)
A financial asset not carried at
fair value through profit or loss is assessed at each reporting
date to determine whether there is objective evidence that it is
impaired. A financial asset is impaired if objective evidence
indicates that a loss event has occurred after the initial
recognition of the asset, and that the loss event had a negative
effect on the estimated future cash flows of that asset that can be
estimated reliably.
An impairment loss in respect of a
financial asset measured at amortised cost is calculated as the
difference between its carrying amount and the present value of the
estimated future cash flows discounted at the asset's original
effective interest rate. Interest on the impaired asset continues
to be recognised through the unwinding of the discount. When a
subsequent event causes the amount of impairment loss to decrease,
the decrease in impairment loss is reversed through the Statement
of Comprehensive Income.
Non-financial assets
The carrying amounts of the Group's
non-financial assets are reviewed at each reporting date to
determine whether there is any indication of impairment. If any
such indication exists, then the asset's recoverable amount is
estimated. For goodwill, and intangible assets that have indefinite
useful lives or that are not yet available for use, the recoverable
amount is estimated each year at the same time.
The recoverable amount of an asset
is the greater of its value in use and its fair value less costs to
sell. In assessing value in use, the estimated future cash flows
are discounted to their present value using a pre-tax discount rate
that reflects current market assessments of the time value of money
and the risks specific to the asset. For the purpose of impairment
testing, assets that cannot be tested individually are grouped
together into the smallest group of assets that generates cash
inflows from continuing use that are largely independent of the
cash inflows of other assets or groups of assets.
An impairment loss is recognised if
the carrying amount of an asset exceeds its estimated recoverable
amount. Impairment losses are recognised in the Statement of
Comprehensive Income. Impairment losses recognised in respect of
CGUs are allocated first to reduce the carrying amount of any
goodwill allocated to the units, and then to reduce the carrying
amounts of the other assets in the unit (group of units) on a pro
rata basis.
An impairment loss in respect of
goodwill is not reversed. In respect of other assets, impairment
losses recognised in prior periods are assessed at each reporting
date for any indications that the loss has decreased or no longer
exists. An impairment loss is reversed if there has been a change
in the estimates used to determine the recoverable amount. An
impairment loss is reversed only to the extent that the asset's
carrying amount does not exceed the carrying amount that would have
been determined, net of depreciation or amortisation, if no
impairment loss had been recognised.
m) Employee benefits
Defined contribution plans
A defined contribution plan is a
post-employment benefit plan under which the company pays fixed
contributions into a separate entity and will have no legal or
constructive obligation to pay further amounts. Obligations for
contributions to defined contribution pension plans are recognised
as an expense in the Statement of Comprehensive Income in the
periods during which services are rendered by employees.
Short term employee benefits
The costs of short-term employee
benefits are recognised as a liability and an expense. The cost of
any unused holiday entitlement is recognised in the period in which
the employee's services are rendered.
Termination benefits
Termination benefits are recognised
immediately as an expense when the Group is demonstrably committed
to terminate the employment of an employee or to provide
termination benefits.
n) Share based payments
Employees of the Group receive
remuneration in the form of share-based payment transactions,
whereby employees render services as consideration for equity
instruments, known as equity settled transactions.
The Group records compensation
expense for all share-based compensation awards based on the grant
date fair value, as adjusted for estimated forfeitures over the
requisite service period of the award. The fair value determined on
the grant date is expensed on a straight-line basis over the term
of the grant. A corresponding adjustment is made to
equity.
Modifications and cancellations
When the terms and conditions of
equity settled share-based payments at the time they were granted
are subsequently modified, the fair value of the share-based
payment under the original terms and conditions and under the
modified terms is determined. Any excess of the modified fair value
is recognised over the remaining vesting period in addition to the
original grant date fair value. The share-based payment is not
adjusted if the modified fair value is less than the original grant
date fair value.
Cancellations or settlements,
including those resulting from employee redundancies, are treated
as an acceleration of vesting and the amount that would have been
recognised over the remaining vesting period is recognised
immediately.
Valuation and Amortisation Method
The Company estimates the fair value
of stock options granted using the Black-Scholes option pricing
formula for CSOP awards and a Monte Carlo simulation for PSP
awards.
Provision is made for National
Insurance Contributions (NICs) on outstanding share options that
are expected to be settled based upon the latest enacted NIC
rates.
o)
Cash Investments
Cash investments include cash held
on short term deposit for six months and are held at amortised
cost.
p) Cash and cash equivalents
Cash and cash equivalents comprise
cash in hand and cash invested readily available within 3
months.
q) Provisions
A provision is recognised in the
balance sheet when the Group has a present legal or constructive
obligation as a result of a past event, which can be reliably
measured and it is probable that an outflow of economic benefits
will be required to settle the obligation. Provisions are
determined by discounting the expected future cash flows at a
pre-tax rate that reflects risks specific to the
liability.
r) Net financing costs
Financing expenses comprise interest
payable, finance charges on finance leases recognised in the
Statement of Comprehensive Income using the effective interest
method. Financing income comprise bank interest
receivable.
Interest income and interest payable
is recognised in the Statement of Comprehensive Income as it
accrues, using the effective interest method.
s) Segmental reporting
Operating segments are reported in a
manner consistent with the internal reporting provided to the chief
operating decision-maker ('CODM'). The CODM, who is responsible for
allocating resources and assessing performance of the operating
segments, has been identified as the Board of Directors of
ActiveOps plc.
The Group will provide information
to the CODM on the basis of products and services, being SaaS and
T&I services. The CODM receives information for these two
segments down to gross margin level.
t) Taxation
Tax on the profit or loss for the
period comprises current and deferred tax. Tax is recognised in the
Statement of Comprehensive Income except to the extent that it
relates to items recognised directly in equity, in which case it is
recognised in equity.
Current tax is the expected tax
payable or receivable on the taxable income or loss for the period,
using tax rates enacted or substantively enacted at the balance
sheet date, and any adjustment to tax payable in respect of
previous periods.
Deferred tax is provided on
temporary differences between the carrying amounts of assets and
liabilities for financial reporting purposes and the amounts used
for taxation purposes. The following temporary differences are not
provided for: the initial recognition of goodwill; the initial
recognition of assets or liabilities that affect neither accounting
nor taxable profit other than in a business combination, and
differences relating to investments in subsidiaries to the extent
that they will probably not reverse in the foreseeable future. The
amount of deferred tax provided is based on the expected manner of
realisation or settlement of the carrying amount of assets and
liabilities, using tax rates enacted or substantively enacted at
the balance sheet date.
A deferred tax asset is recognised
only to the extent that it is probable that future taxable profits
will be available against which the temporary difference can be
utilised.
u) Reserves
Share capital
Share capital represents the nominal
value of shares that have been issued.
Share premium account
Share premium includes any premiums
received on issue of share capital. Any transaction costs
associated with the issuing of shares are deducted from share
premium, net of any related income tax benefits.
Merger relief
Merger relief represents the excess
of the Company's investment over the nominal value of ActiveOps Pty
Ltd.'s shares acquired using the principles of merger
accounting.
Share option reserve
The share option reserve is used to
recognise the grant date fair value of options issued to employees
but not exercised.
Foreign exchange reserve
The foreign exchange reserve
includes all cumulative translation differences on conversion of
the Group's foreign operations from their functional currencies to
its presentation currency of sterling.
Retained Earnings
Retained earnings includes all
current and prior period retained profits and losses.
3. Key accounting estimates and judgements
The preparation of the financial
statements in compliance with IFRS requires the use of certain
critical accounting estimates. It also requires Group management to
exercise judgement and use assumptions in applying the Group's
accounting policies. The resulting accounting estimates calculated
using these judgements and assumptions will, by definition, seldom
equal the related actual results but are based on historical
experience and expectations of future events. Management believe
that the estimates utilised in preparing the financial statements
are reasonable and prudent.
The judgements and key sources of
estimation uncertainty that have a significant effect on the
amounts recognised in the financial statements are discussed
below.
Capitalisation of development costs
The Group invests on a continual
basis in the development of software for sale to third parties.
There is a continual process of enhancements to and expansion of
the software with judgement required in assessing whether the
development costs meet the criteria for capitalisation.
In making this judgement, the Group
evaluates, amongst other factors, whether there are future economic
benefits beyond the current period and management's ability to
measure reliably the expenditure attributable to the project.
Judgement is therefore required in determining the practice for
capitalising development costs.
During the year the group has
capitalised development costs of £1.3m (2023: £0.9m) associated
with the delivery of new features across the product set that are
expected to further enhance the proposition for the customer and
drive future economic benefit. The amount capitalised has been
calculated based on the time spent by individual developers on
these new features. The costs are amortised using the straight-line
method from the launch of the product over the expected life cycle
of the enhancements which is expected to be five years. The group
has not capitalised costs of £2.2m (2023: £2.7m) associated with
maintenance work, projects with no future economic benefit, and
internal time including meetings and annual leave.
4. Revenue
The Group derives all its revenue
from the transfer of goods and services over time.
A disaggregated geographical split
of revenue by operating segment is shown below between EMEIA
(Europe, the Middle East, India and Africa), North America and Asia
Pacific. EMEIA are aggregated together as they operate and are
managed as one business. All revenue streams are recognised over
time.
Year ended 31 March 2024
|
SaaS
£000
|
T&I
£000
|
Total
£000
|
EMEIA
|
13,170
|
2,057
|
15,227
|
North America
|
5,822
|
534
|
6,356
|
Asia Pacific
|
4,793
|
398
|
5,191
|
|
23,785
|
2,989
|
26,774
|
Year ended 31 March 2023
|
SaaS
£000
|
T&I
£000
|
Total
£000
|
EMEIA
|
11,247
|
2,678
|
13,925
|
North America
|
5,863
|
175
|
6,038
|
Asia Pacific
|
4,948
|
548
|
5,496
|
|
22,058
|
3,401
|
25,459
|
SaaS contracts delivered over time
are mostly invoiced in advance and incomplete performance
obligations at the year-end are recorded in deferred income in the
statement of financial position. T&I revenues are invoiced once
the T&I is completed or earlier if contractually allowed with
contract assets or contract liabilities recognised in accordance
with performance obligations satisfied. The Group has recognised
the following assets and liabilities related to contracts with
customers.
At 31 March
|
2024
£000
|
2023
£000
|
Contract assets
|
957
|
306
|
Contract liabilities
|
(14,420)
|
(13,474)
|
Due to the nature of the customer
contracts, being annual service-related fees that are performed
over time, there is always an element of the contractual
performance obligation that has not been delivered at the year end.
As performance obligations delivered over time are invoiced in
advance the aggregate amount of the transaction price allocated to
the performance obligations unsatisfied, or partially unsatisfied,
at the end of each reporting period equates to the contract
liability.
The outstanding performance
obligations at the year-end are expected to be satisfied within 12
months of the reporting date.
The following table shows revenue
recognised in the current reporting period relating to brought
forward contract liabilities.
For the year ended 31
March
|
2024
£000
|
2023
£000
|
Revenue recognised that was included
in the contract liability balance at the beginning of the
period
|
13,420
|
8,146
|
Contract assets have increased due
to timing of customer billing. Contract liabilities have marginally
increased due to growth in SaaS revenues invoiced in
advance.
5. Segmental analysis
The Group has two reporting
segments, being SaaS and T&I. The Group focuses its internal
management reporting predominantly on revenue and cost of sales. No
non-GAAP reporting measures are monitored. Total assets and
liabilities are not provided to the CODM in the Group's internal
management reporting by segment and therefore a split has not been
presented below. Information about geographical revenue by segment
is disclosed in note 4.
During the year ended 31 March 2024
approximately £5,675k (2023: £6,301k) of the Group's external
revenue was derived from sales to two specific customers with
revenues greater than 10% of the total through SaaS and T&I
operating segments.
Year ended 31 March 2024
|
SaaS
£000
|
T&I
£000
|
Total
£000
|
Revenue
|
23,785
|
2,989
|
26,774
|
Cost of sales
|
(3,084)
|
(1,219)
|
(4,303)
|
|
20,701
|
1,770
|
22,471
|
Year ended 31 March 2023
|
SaaS
£000
|
T&I
£000
|
Total
£000
|
Revenue
|
22,058
|
3,401
|
25,459
|
Cost of sales
|
(3,411)
|
(1,268)
|
(4,679)
|
|
18,647
|
2,133
|
20,780
|
6. Taxation
For the year ended 31
March
|
2024
£000
|
2023
£000
|
Current income tax
|
|
|
Foreign current tax on profit for
the current period
|
174
|
362
|
Adjustments in respect of prior
periods
|
(44)
|
34
|
Deferred tax
|
|
|
Origination and reversal of timing
differences
|
31
|
(139)
|
Adjustments in respect of prior
periods
|
-
|
9
|
Effect of change in foreign tax rate
on opening deferred tax position
|
(19)
|
1
|
Total tax charge
|
142
|
267
|
For the year ended 31
March
|
2024
£000
|
2023
£000
|
Profit/(loss) before tax
|
987
|
(230)
|
|
|
|
Tax at domestic rate of 25% (2023:
19%)
|
247
|
(44)
|
|
|
|
Effect of:
|
|
|
Expenses that are not deductible in
determining taxable profit
|
141
|
(25)
|
Differences in current and deferred
tax rates
|
(19)
|
1
|
Deferred tax not
recognised
|
(219)
|
180
|
Withholding taxes
|
11
|
7
|
Adjustments in respect of prior
periods - current tax
|
(44)
|
34
|
Adjustments in respect of prior
periods - deferred tax
|
-
|
9
|
Effect of other tax rates
|
25
|
105
|
Total tax charge
|
142
|
267
|
At 31 March 2024 the Company and its
Group had tax losses of approximately £18.1m (2023: £19.9m) to
carry forward to offset against future taxable profits.
The effect of change in foreign tax
rate on opening deferred tax position relates to an increase in
corporation tax rate for ActiveOps Australia Pty Limited from 25%
to 30%, as the Company is no longer considered a Base Rate Entity
for Australian tax purposes due to the revenue of the
Group.
7. Intangible assets
|
Goodwill
£000
|
Customer
relationships
£000
|
Purchased
software
£000
|
Intellectual property rights
£000
|
Capitalisation of development costs
£000
|
Total
£000
|
Cost
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
At 1 April 2022
|
1,154
|
6,289
|
867
|
125
|
364
|
8,799
|
Foreign exchange
|
36
|
135
|
31
|
-
|
-
|
202
|
Additions (purchases)
|
-
|
-
|
40
|
-
|
-
|
40
|
Additions (internal
developments)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
851
|
851
|
At
31 March 2023
|
1,190
|
6,424
|
938
|
125
|
1,215
|
9,892
|
Foreign exchange
|
(13)
|
(42)
|
(10)
|
-
|
-
|
(65)
|
Additions (purchases)
|
-
|
-
|
9
|
-
|
-
|
9
|
Additions (internal
developments)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
1,347
|
1,347
|
Impairment
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
At
31 March 2024
|
1,177
|
6,382
|
937
|
125
|
2,562
|
11,183
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Amortisation
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
At 1 April 2022
|
-
|
2,733
|
480
|
125
|
-
|
3,338
|
Foreign exchange
|
-
|
45
|
8
|
-
|
-
|
53
|
Charge for the year
|
-
|
630
|
63
|
-
|
73
|
766
|
At
31 March 2023
|
-
|
3,408
|
551
|
125
|
73
|
4,157
|
Foreign exchange
|
-
|
-
|
1
|
-
|
-
|
1
|
Charge for the year
|
-
|
626
|
68
|
-
|
319
|
1,013
|
Impairment
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
218
|
218
|
At
31 March 2024
|
-
|
4,034
|
620
|
125
|
610
|
5,389
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net
book value
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
At
31 March 2024
|
1,177
|
2,348
|
317
|
-
|
1,952
|
5,794
|
At
31 March 2023
|
1,190
|
3,016
|
387
|
-
|
1,142
|
5,735
|
All amortisation and impairment
charges are included within depreciation and amortisation in the
Statement of Comprehensive Income.
There are two assets included in
capitalised development costs which are material to the financial
statements.
Asset
|
Description
|
Carrying
Amount
£000
|
Remaining
Amortisation Period
|
Cloud Gatherer
|
Gives ActiveOps the ability to host
clients data in the cloud rather than on premise.
|
357
|
5
years
|
CaseWorkiQ redevelopment into
ControliQ
|
Replatforming CaseWorkiQ data
capture and reporting onto the ControliQ platform to enable a more
seamless platform for customers who require both
products.
|
583
|
5
years
|
The aggregate research and
development expenditure recognised as an expense during the period
is £4.3m (2023: £4.0m).
The Group tests internally generated
intangible assets for impairment on an annual basis. One project,
ControliQ Capex, capitalised during the year ended 31 March 2022
has been identified as impaired and has been written off during the
year.
Customer relationships consists of
two individual assets: the acquired relationships from the purchase
of Open Connect on the 1 August 2019, which has a netbook value of
£1.1m (2023: £1.3m) and is being amortised until 31 July 2029; and
the acquired relationships from the purchase of ActiveOps Pty Ltd
and Active Operations Management Australia on the 1 April 2017,
which has a netbook value of £1.3m (2023: £1.7m) and is being
amortised until 31 March 2027.
The carrying amount of goodwill
relates to two cash generating units and reflects the difference
between the fair value of consideration transferred and the fair
value of assets and liabilities purchased.
Goodwill has been allocated for
impairment testing purposes to the following cash generating units.
The carrying values are as follows:
At 31 March
|
2024
£000
|
2023
£000
|
Australia
|
577
|
577
|
United States of America
|
600
|
613
|
|
1,177
|
1,190
|
The Australian goodwill relates to
the purchase of ActiveOps Pty Limited and Active Operations
Management Australia Pty Ltd on 1 April 2017.
The United States of America
goodwill relates to the purchase of OpenConnect on the 1 August
2019. The residual amount relates to the amount retained in
ActiveOps USA Inc. on disposal of OpenConnect on 19 October
2020.
The Group tests whether goodwill has
suffered any impairment on an annual basis, or more frequently
where evidence of impairment indicators exist, by comparing the
value of the CGUs with their value in use. Value in use is
estimated based on expected future five-year cashflows, assuming a
retention decrease of 10% each year, discounted to present value
using a post-tax discount rate that reflects current market
assumptions of the time value of money. An impairment charge arises
where the carrying value exceeds the value in use.
The inputs into the expected
cashflows are based on the most recent forecasts approved and
reviewed by the Directors for the next three years based on
expected growth within those CGU's over that period.
The key inputs and assumptions into
the cashflow forecast are:
• Revenue growth, based
upon management's expected growth in the Group's products. These
are determined by understanding the needs of current customers and
expected number of license sales pipeline to determine expected
future sales volumes. These sales volumes are coupled with the
current pricing to determine the forecast revenues. Considerations
are also made for customer churn which is based upon current churn
rates. T&I revenues are derived from forecast additional SaaS
sales using historical customer behaviours as a basis.
• Cost of sales and any
other direct costs based upon expected revenues.
• Expected movements in
the overhead costs of the business given the need to indirectly
service growth in revenue.
• Future capital
expenditure and other changes to working capital as required to
facilitate the forecast revenue growth.
In determining the potential for
impairment of the cash generating units, management considered 5
years of recoverability of each asset and assumed a customer
attrition rate of 10%. The Group has discounted the cashflows at
12.0% for the Australian CGU and 12.0% for the United States of
America CGU. There is substantial headroom in the value in use
calculations and management have therefore not identified any
reasonably possible changes in any key assumption that would lead
to the need for impairment of either CGU.
8. Property, plant and equipment
|
Leasehold
improvements
£000
|
Plant and
machinery
£000
|
Fixtures,
fittings and equipment
£000
|
Total
£000
|
Cost
|
|
|
|
|
At 1 April 2022
|
171
|
410
|
464
|
1,045
|
Foreign exchange
|
(4)
|
(1)
|
(5)
|
(10)
|
Additions
|
-
|
65
|
25
|
90
|
Disposals
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
At
31 March 2023
|
167
|
474
|
484
|
1,125
|
Foreign exchange
|
(2)
|
(7)
|
(6)
|
(15)
|
Additions
|
-
|
96
|
83
|
179
|
At
31 March 2024
|
165
|
563
|
561
|
1,289
|
|
|
|
|
|
Accumulated depreciation
|
|
|
|
|
At 1 April 2022
|
171
|
300
|
375
|
846
|
Foreign exchange
|
(4)
|
(2)
|
(4)
|
(10)
|
Charge for the year
|
-
|
71
|
56
|
127
|
Disposals
|
|
|
|
|
At
31 March 2023
|
167
|
369
|
427
|
963
|
Foreign exchange
|
(2)
|
(6)
|
(4)
|
(12)
|
Charge for the year
|
-
|
78
|
39
|
117
|
At
31 March 2024
|
165
|
441
|
462
|
1,068
|
|
|
|
|
|
Carrying amount
|
|
|
|
|
At
31 March 2024
|
-
|
122
|
99
|
221
|
At 31 March 2023
|
-
|
105
|
57
|
162
|
All depreciation and impairment
charges are included within depreciation and amortisation in the
Statement of Comprehensive Income.
9. Right of use assets
|
Buildings
£000
|
Net
book value
|
|
At 1 April 2022
|
564
|
Foreign exchange
|
(3)
|
Depreciation charge for the
year
|
(142)
|
At
31 March 2023
|
419
|
Foreign exchange
|
19
|
Depreciation charge for the
year
|
(137)
|
At
31 March 2024
|
301
|
The right of use asset relates to
the property leases for operating premises across the
group.
Amounts recognised in the Statement
of Financial Position
At 31 March
|
2024
£000
|
2023
£000
|
Lease liabilities
|
|
|
Current
|
69
|
100
|
Non-current
|
239
|
364
|
|
308
|
464
|
Amounts recognised in the Statement
of Profit or Loss
For the year ended 31
March
|
2024
£000
|
2023
£000
|
Interest expense
|
14
|
37
|
Expense for short term leased
properties
|
126
|
150
|
Depreciation of Right-of-use
assets
|
137
|
142
|
Amounts recognised in the Statement
of Cashflows
For the year ended 31
March
|
2024
£000
|
2023
£000
|
Total cash outflows
|
295
|
360
|
ActiveOps plc is required to restore
its leased premises to their original condition at the end of the
respective lease terms (expiring March 2027). A provision of £50k
has been recognised for the estimated expenditure required to
remove any leasehold improvements.
10. Trade and other receivables
At 31 March
|
2024
£000
|
2023
£000
|
|
Trade receivables
|
4,363
|
5,507
|
|
Prepayments and accrued
income
|
1,398
|
675
|
|
Other receivables
|
178
|
191
|
|
|
5,939
|
6,373
|
|
The Directors consider the carrying
value of trade and other receivables to be approximately equal to
their fair value due to their short term nature.
At 31 March
|
2024
£000
|
2023
£000
|
Trade receivables from contracts
with customers
|
4,384
|
5,563
|
Less loss allowance
|
(21)
|
(56)
|
|
4,363
|
5,507
|
Trade receivables are amounts due
from customers for goods sold or services performed in the ordinary
course of business. They are generally due for settlement within 30
days and are therefore all classified as current. Trade receivables
are recognised initially at the amount of consideration that is
unconditional. The group holds the trade receivables with the
objective of collecting the contractual cash flows, and so it
measures them subsequently at amortised cost using the effective
interest method. Details about the group's impairment policies and
the calculation of the loss allowance are provided in note
2.
11. Cash Investments
At 31 March
|
2024
£000
|
2023
£000
|
Cash Investments
|
6,253
|
3,037
|
In the Year Ended 31 March 2023
financial statements the cash balance of £15,377k included £3,037k
of cash held on short term deposit, which has been reclassified to
Cash Investments. The Cash Investments balance of £6,253k held at
the year end is cash on deposit maturing within 3 months of the
year end.