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Operator
Good day, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Synchronoss First Quarter 2021 Earnings Call.
(Operator Instructions)
Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded.
(Operator Instructions)
I would now like to hand the conference over to Joo-Hun Kim, Investor Relations. Please go ahead.
Joo-Hun Kim
Thank you, operator. Good afternoon, and welcome to Synchronoss' First Quarter 2021 Earnings Conference Call.
With me on today's call are Synchronoss' President and Chief Executive Officer, Jeff Miller; and Chief Financial Officer, David Clark.
Before I turn the call over to Jeff and David, I'd like to cover a few quick items. This afternoon, Synchronoss issued a press release announcing its financial results. Our release is available on the company's website at synchronoss.com. This call is being broadcast live over the Internet for all interested parties, and the webcast will be archived on the Investor Relations page of the company's website.
I want to remind everyone that on today's call, management will discuss certain factors that are likely to influence the business going forward. Any factors discussed today that are not historical, particularly comments regarding our long-term prospects and market opportunities could be considered forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements may include comments about the company's plans and expectations of future performance.
Forward-looking statements are subject to a number of risks and uncertainties, which could cause actual results to differ materially.
We encourage all of our listeners to review our SEC filings, including our most recent 10-K and 10-Q for a complete description of these risks. Our statements on this call are made as of today, May 10, 2021, and the company undertakes no obligation to revise or publicly update any of the forward-looking statements contained herein, whether as a result of new information, future events, changes in expectations or otherwise.
Additionally, throughout this call, we will be discussing certain non-GAAP financial measures, such as adjusted EBITDA. Adjusted EBITDA does not necessarily equate to cash generated by operations as it does not account for such items as deferred revenue or the capitalization of software development.
Today's earnings release and the related current report on Form 8-K describe the differences between our non-GAAP and GAAP reporting and present a reconciliation between the 2 for the periods reported in the release.
With that said, I'll now turn the call over to Jeff.
Jeffrey George Miller - President, CEO & Director
Thanks, Joo-Hun, and good afternoon, everyone. We appreciate you joining us today, and thank you for your continued interest in Synchronoss. I am pleased to report that Synchronoss delivered solid first quarter results, including first quarter revenue of $65.5 million and adjusted EBITDA of $5.5 million, a 215% increase year-over-year.
Both revenue and adjusted EBITDA beat our internal targets giving us confidence to raise our adjusted EBITDA guidance for the full year 2021. Recurring revenue for the quarter was 86% of total revenue, which is the highest we've seen in over a year.
We believe this metric, combined with the fact that the vast majority of our revenue being under multiyear contracts brings significant stability and predictability to our business model. I'd like to thank and congratulate the employees of Synchronoss for all their hard work in getting 2021 off to a good start.
Some other highlights in the quarter, including the signing of several new customer contracts. Including 2 significant deals in Southeast Asia: 1 for cloud and 1 for Messaging. We also have seen continued growth in the existing cloud customer subscriber base. Plus we continued to deliver new product innovations that led to the release of several new products, which we believe will help drive revenue growth.
Before we get into the details of the quarter, I'd like to address the recent news about the dissolution of CCMI, or the Common Carrier Messaging Initiative in the U.S. that has been in various news reports. You should recall that CCMI was a joint venture created by the 3 largest U.S. carriers to provide its members a universal RCS messaging platform and a shared go-to-market approach to deliver advanced messaging experiences across all the major carriers.
Recently, as has been reported in the news, CCMI's members have decided to end the joint venture and pursue their RCS deployments individually. We can assure you that based on the commercial agreement that we have in place with CCMI, we do not expect that this will have any negative impact on Synchronoss' financial results in 2021.
In fact, the transition from SMS to RCS messaging has the potential to disrupt the current OTT messaging paradigm and enable carriers to recapture market share and revenue, while at the same time, generating a return on the billions that they're investing in 5G infrastructure.
We believe the U.S. carriers are still committed to bringing RCS to U.S. wireless users and to launch the RCS-based networks in 2021, and Synchronoss is prepared to make that happen. We believe the RCS rollout in the U.S. will now mirror the model that we've implemented in Japan with each carrier offering its own unique go-to-market approach. Leveraging on Synchronoss' success in Japan, we're well positioned to provide U.S. carriers a compelling RCS solution, and we hope to share an update on our progress in the coming months.
Now back to the first quarter results. In cloud, we made solid progress by signing new deals, while at the same time, accelerating subscriber growth with our existing carrier customers. We signed an important deal with Telkomsigma, the IT arm of Telkom Indonesia group, Indonesia's state-owned telecommunications conglomerate.
With this relationship, Telkomsigma will provide students with the Synchronoss Personal Cloud solution at 25 universities, allowing for secure cloud access to store, share and transfer academic documents with their professors and fellow students. Students will also have the option to continue with a paid version after they graduate, outside of being an important relationship with one of the largest carriers in the country of over 270 million people. This win, along with our new agreement with Allstate Protection Plans, highlights the different use cases available to carriers and other service providers as they look to monetize their subscriber base. And for Synchronoss, these new use cases increase the addressable market for our cloud platform.
Speaking of Allstate Protection Plans, I'm pleased to say that we've completed our work on their SquareTrade cloud offering and have delivered it to them for user acceptance testing. We expect that the subscriber offering will be deployed shortly, which should help drive additional cloud revenue in the back half of the year.
During the quarter, we continued to see an acceleration in our AT&T subscriber base. And I'm pleased to say that, that momentum has continued in the second quarter, not only because of new phone launches but also because of more foot traffic in the AT&T retail stores.
Also during the quarter, Verizon launched a significant advertising campaign with their Synchronoss-delivered unlimited cloud storage offering, and we're pleased to see the growth in the uptake of that product as a result. We believe our future subscriber growth with Verizon will benefit as a result. And more broadly, we anticipate double-digit subscriber growth across the global base of Synchronoss cloud customers this year.
Turning to Messaging. In the first quarter, we had a major new customer win to deploy RCS in another country in Asia. This is another important milestone for Synchronoss as it gives us access to important messaging market with over 100 million subscribers. Additionally, this will be the first commercial deployment that leverages the entirety of our expanded messaging IP into a complete end-to-end Synchronoss solution, including our own map or messaging as a platform and our own messaging marketplace solution, which is our brand facing monetization platform that enables both carriers and brands to capitalize on the business messaging opportunity.
This new contract, combined with our expanded IP, further strengthens our lead in providing an advanced messaging solution that help carriers protect and grow their messaging revenue streams. We won this following a rigorous selection process, where we distinguished ourselves based on our established leadership position in global RCS deployments.
Our implementation is now underway, and we're in the process of deploying the solution to a large local systems integrator. This win provides us the ability to further expand our presence in the APAC and, in particular, Southeast Asia market as well as it improves our messaging profitability due to the increased use of Synchronoss IP.
In core messaging, we recently completed the migration of over 4 million British Telecom residential broadband users to our e-mail platform. And I'm happy to report that this is being met with great success as both our iOS and Android e-mail user apps have ratings of greater than 4.5 on a 5-point scale. This puts us in good standing with this large and influential European carrier who also utilizes our cloud platform in addition to our messaging platform.
Also in Europe, we signed multiple agreements with Telecom Italia Mobile, or TIM, that included the upgrade of their -- to our latest messaging platform, the migration from an on-premise solution to a private cloud-based solution and added functionality in the form of antivirus and anti-spam services to their subscribers.
We also kicked off the e-mail migration process on behalf of Altice this quarter, a new core messaging customer that we signed earlier in the year and discussed on our last call. More broadly, we believe that there will be ongoing competitive replacement opportunities in the core messaging market, and we feel great about our ability to win on those, just as we did with Altice last quarter and with Bell Canada and Proximus last year.
While often overlooked, our core messaging business remains healthy, competitive and profitable. And as highlighted by the BT app ratings, we've gotten excellent feedback from our customers' subscribers.
Moving on to digital business. The investments we've made in product innovation and improved operational efficiencies in our digital business are paying dividends. Product-wise, we continue to innovate on our total network management product suite. We formally refer to this suite of products as the diversified portfolio. But we had 2 major releases for invoice claims management as well as launches of new module in our spatialSUITE called spatialOFFICE. SpatialOFFICE extends the access to our leading network intelligence and planning tool to a broader user base across the enterprise, providing real-time insight to network data via user-friendly interfaces.
It allows resources in the field as well as in the office to manage the network simultaneously via a single application. Also under the total network management umbrella, we launched our blockchain initiative with a Tier 1 mobile provider through our partnership with Sage Management. Our solution leverages our combined assets to revolutionize how carriers do business with each other for interconnection services, driving operational efficiencies that translate to bottom line impact for our customers.
On the new business front, we signed new deals with a major Canadian communications provider for spatial and a large U.S. regional communications provider for financial analytics, both during the quarter, expanding our reach in both of these total network management product categories.
Operationally, we continue to streamline our cost structure. In this quarter, we managed to find additional efficiencies in our cloud hosting platform, which contributed to improved gross margin performance.
So in summary, I'm pleased with our first quarter results. We closed several new meaningful customer contracts during the quarter, saw continued growth in our cloud subscriber base and delivered on some significant product milestones.
I'm proud of the Synchronoss team's hard work as we continue to be driven by delivery and execution for our customers, disciplined cost management, continued product innovation and as you heard today, new customer acquisitions.
We look forward to continuing to execute on our strategy of focused and profitable growth in 2021.
Lastly, I want to make a comment on our work to deliver a sustainable capital structure for Synchronoss. It is top of mind for almost every investor we talk to, and I want to reassure you that is also one of the most important priorities of our senior management team as well, and we are making progress in finding a sustainable solution, and we look forward to updating investors in the coming months.
With that, I'll turn the call over to David to review the financial results in more detail as well as provide an update to our financial outlook.
David?
David D. Clark - CFO
Thanks, Jeff, and thank you, everyone, for joining us. I will review our first quarter 2021 results in more detail and update our guidance for the full year of 2021.
Before I start, I have to remind listeners that because of the 5-year extension of our cloud contract with Verizon executed in July of 2020, we had to extend the recognition of noncash deferred revenue across the term of the new contract as required by ASC 606, which negatively impacts our Q1 2021 comparable results by approximately $5 million. This also has an equal impact on EBITDA in the quarter. I will be referring to adjusted results that account for this treatment throughout this call as we believe it more accurately reflects the true progress we have made year-over-year.
Now on to results. Total revenue in the first quarter was $65.5 million, down 15% from $77.1 million in the first quarter of 2020 and down 6% from $69.4 million in the fourth quarter. As I just mentioned, the year-over-year results were impacted by the deferral of noncash revenue due to our Verizon contract renewal. In addition, recall we had large licensed professional services revenue from CCMI in the first quarter of 2020, which did not repeat this year.
As Jeff mentioned in his prepared remarks, despite the ending of the CCMI joint venture, there is a shared urgency by the U.S. carriers to launch RCS-based networks in 2021, and we believe Synchronoss is uniquely positioned to provide a compelling solution.
We believe the RCS business model in the U.S. could be similar to our implementation in Japan with each carrier offering its own RCS deployment. At present, we are in the process of talking to the U.S. carriers individually and will provide everyone with an update on our progress in the coming months.
Moving on, recurring revenue came in at 86% of total revenue this quarter versus 82% last year. This metric, combined with the fact that the vast majority of our revenues under multiyear contracts, bring significant predictability and stability to our business model. We are encouraged by our revenue results in the first quarter, and we believe Synchronoss is in good position to deliver steady sequential revenue growth for the remainder of the year.
Adjusted EBITDA was $5.5 million, a 215% increase from the first quarter of 2020, when the EBITDA was $1.8 million despite being negatively impacted by the Verizon revenue deferral. Our solid EBITDA performance was a result of continuing cost management, operational efficiency initiatives throughout the organization and upside in total revenue relative to our own internal forecast.
I would add that we also benefited from onetime favorable expense item reductions that totaled approximately $1 million in the quarter. Total costs and expenses were $74.5 million, down almost $20 million or 21% from the first quarter of 2020. This is largely a result of the $55 million target cost reduction we began in 2020. We achieved $45 million in annual cost savings in 2020 and continued cost management and efficiency initiatives in 2021, as evidenced by the EBITDA upside and the improving gross profit margin.
Adjusted gross profit in the quarter was $37.4 million and adjusted gross profit margin was 57% compared with $42.4 million and 55% in the first quarter of 2020. The improvements to adjusted gross margin were driven by lower cost of goods sold and lower expenses due to cost management and operational efficiency initiatives. We are pleased with the gross profit margin expansion we saw in the first quarter and believe we continue this trend throughout the remainder of the year.
Cloud revenue of $38.9 million was comparable to $39.2 million we reported in the fourth quarter and down from $41 million or 5% from the first quarter of 2020. Adjusting for the extension of noncash deferred revenue following the 5-year renewal of our contract with Verizon, cloud revenue would have been up 7% year-over-year. This year-over-year increase in adjusted revenue was driven primarily by cloud subscriber growth as our carrier partners continue to add new customers onto our platform.
Messaging revenue in the first quarter was $13.6 million, down 6% from the fourth quarter and down 42% year-over-year. The decline in Messaging revenues in Q4 is largely a result of Japanese carrier block license purchases in the fourth quarter that did not repeat in this quarter, and we anticipate more block purchases from these carriers as subscriber work continues, but those will likely happen in the second half of 2021.
The decline in the year-over-year was due to significant license and professional revenue from CCMI in the first quarter of 2020, which did not repeat this year. As a reminder, based on the commercial agreement we have with CCMI, we do not expect any negative impact to our financial results in 2021 due to the dissolution of their joint venture.
Digital revenue was $13 million, was down 17% from the fourth quarter but up slightly from $12.8 million in the first quarter of 2020. The sequential decrease was largely a function of seasonal decline on license revenue and the completion of a large professional services agreement. The product improvements and operational efficiencies we have made to digital has tightened its value proposition, and we believe it will continue to be a profitable contributor to Synchronoss in 2021. Cash and cash equivalents totaled $29.8 million, down $3.8 million from our 2020 year-end balance of $33.6 million, largely as a result of changes in working capital.
As Jeff mentioned, refinancing of our preferred stock with a cost-effective and permanent long-term capital structure is a top priority for Synchronoss. We are making progress on potential solutions and hope to have an update in the coming months.
Turning to guidance. We are pleased we're raising our adjusted EBITDA guidance for the full year from a range of $30 million to $35 million to a range of $32 million to $37 million, which will represent EBITDA growth year-over-year of 15% to 33%, respectively.
We are leaving revenue guidance unchanged but believe total revenue should improve sequentially going forward with the acceleration in the back half of the year.
Lastly, on the Investor Relations front, we are participating in the upcoming Oppenheimer conference on Wednesday and at the Needham conference on May 19. If you're interested in participating either event, please schedule to visit with your Oppenheimer or Needham representative.
And with that, operator, let's open the call for questions.
Operator
(Operator Instructions)
First question comes from the line of Mike Walkley of Canaccord.
Thomas Michael Walkley - MD & Senior Equity Analyst
Congrats on the strong results and cost discipline. I guess, Jeff, first question for you. Just focusing on the CCMI and your strong relationships with AT&T and Verizon. Can you maybe talk about opportunities that for Synchronoss as it relates to RCS and the JV breaking up? And also, this open new opportunities for Synchronoss, let's say, like a UScellular or other U.S. carriers?
Jeffrey George Miller - President, CEO & Director
I would say that you are heading down the right path on both fronts. First off, as you know, we've worked throughout 2020 in preparation for the readiness of an RCS-based platform in the U.S., and we did so with really all 3 carriers in the U.S. Most progress on the testing and implementation have been made by AT&T and Verizon. And as such, that puts them in a position where they have an opportunity to launch publicly during the year. And we think as a result of the progress that's going be made, the successful relationship that we've had working through them as part of the CCMI joint venture, it does position us well to be of service to them as they implement their independent plans for RCS-based messaging.
And then to your point, by leveraging a platform that's still not unlike what we've done in Japan, is accessible for multiple users or multiple carriers. This does create an opportunity for us to invite a broader audience of participation into leveraging a U.S.-based platform that Synchronoss is in a position to put in place. Nothing to say on that any further today, but it certainly is an opportunity.
Thomas Michael Walkley - MD & Senior Equity Analyst
And maybe just a follow-up on that for either you or David. Just with the reiteration of guidance and the CCMI breakup, does the guidance assume you win some of these individual carriers and there's some revenue with the launches or new licenses later in the year? Or is that not really in this year's guidance to become? But just trying to flesh that out a little more.
Jeffrey George Miller - President, CEO & Director
I would, say -- yes, go ahead David, if you want to address it or I will.
David D. Clark - CFO
No, go ahead, Jeff. Go ahead.
Jeffrey George Miller - President, CEO & Director
Yes. I would say that at this point in time, the guidance reflects the same revenue stream that we had anticipated effectively from CCMI and no additional new business.
Thomas Michael Walkley - MD & Senior Equity Analyst
Got it. And David, a question from me, just on the cost control. You guys continue to do a good job, better gross margin and costs coming out. Are you almost at the $55 million run rate now, we should expect kind of steady OpEx with maybe slightly improving gross margin going forward? Or how should we think about any other cost impact coming through the model this year?
David D. Clark - CFO
I think if you're looking at $55 million, you're referring to quarterlies?
Thomas Michael Walkley - MD & Senior Equity Analyst
Yes.
David D. Clark - CFO
I think the run rate may not be down that far for the remainder of the year. I think you're going to see us running kind of at that $60 million mark for the rest of the year, and we could take you through -- we can go through your model a little later too. And always looking to included efficiencies, obviously.
Thomas Michael Walkley - MD & Senior Equity Analyst
Got you. So far, you're close to getting that $55 million in total cost savings you have achieved. So kind of -- Yes.
David D. Clark - CFO
Oh, right. I thought you meant $55 million was the run rate. No, yes, absolutely. That's in our interim. We took some more cost actions in the first quarter. I got it.
Jeffrey George Miller - President, CEO & Director
Yes. So just to connect the dots for others who are listening. We have communicated that an annualized basis of $55 million of savings in 2021 over 2020 cost performance. And yes, our quarterly revenue stream -- quarterly expense stream is now beginning to reflect that we are close to completion on all of that.
Thomas Michael Walkley - MD & Senior Equity Analyst
Great. Last question for you, Jeff, then I'll just pass it on. You've been CEO for a short time now, won some nice deals this quarter. As you look at your pipeline for the rest of, call it, the calendar year, what are some areas that you're most excited about in terms of pipeline development since you've taken over?
Jeffrey George Miller - President, CEO & Director
Well, I'll say it sort of comes in 2 areas. Number one, as you've seen, this quarter, we had a number of nice new deals that were closed in the quarter. But if not of equal or greater encouragement was the fact that we continue to see a rapid and solid growth across our base of cloud subscribers. And the reason I continue to be encouraged by that, of course, is because that infrastructure is now in place. And it has the ability without additional -- significant additional cost to contribute to our growth in the year. There are other opportunities that we see in messaging, and in cloud and in digital that we expect to expand and announce throughout the course of this year. However, given the revenue models that we have and most of it being recurring, the revenue in year impact would be relatively small.
Operator
Next question comes from the line of Jon Hickman from Ladenburg.
Jon Robert Hickman - MD of Equity Research & Special Situations Analyst
I just want to follow-up on the CCMI thing. So are you guaranteed some minimum payments this year even though the partnerships like -- or joint ventures just dissolved?
Jeffrey George Miller - President, CEO & Director
Yes. Just look at it this way, Jon, that we have a structure in place where there were commitments, minimum commitments as part of our commercial relationship with the joint venture that we had when we made that in Q4 of 2019. And what we're making sure is that we did not have any revenue expectations in 2021 that went beyond the commitments that we already had in place with the joint venture. And as such, it will not have any, as we said, negative impacts at all on our fiscal year performance this year.
And as Mike referenced, there could be some opportunities for us to improve upon that situation as we strike new relationships independently with the operators in the U.S.
Jon Robert Hickman - MD of Equity Research & Special Situations Analyst
Okay. I have one more question about this. So I thought one of the key features of this platform would be that since everybody would be using the same, I guess, I don't know, platform technology, that would make it easier for brands and advertisers to utilize a common platform and hit -- design their ads and their -- whatever their campaigns all on one unified place, and that would make it easier for everybody. And I take it that's not going to be the case going forward since AT&T and Verizon and whoever will do their own thing now.
Jeffrey George Miller - President, CEO & Director
Well, there's sort of 2 elements to that. The first is, yes, the vision going in, I don't want to speak on behalf of the joint venture, but essentially what they communicated as they launched, was the intent to bring together the collective power of some 300 million subscribers in the United States and to make them available to one community of brands and advertisers.
What -- that opportunity really has not gone away in total. However, the reconstruction of it for a brand might get a little more complex. We still believe that it is important for the success of RCS in the United States to leverage the entirety of the subscriber base. But what will change from what was done in the joint venture is that there might be a unique implementation with certain brands in a certain way by a specific carrier.
If they have those brands to leverage and each of the U.S. carriers, as you know, have their own unique set of relationships in some cases with brands. Then there are other brands that are national or international brands that they might want to leverage collectively. And I would not be surprised that over time, as this RCS community and critical massive users builds that there will be a means by which to aggregate the total population together even if they're on separate marketing or go-to-market implementations.
Jon Robert Hickman - MD of Equity Research & Special Situations Analyst
Okay. So do you -- competition-wise, do you see -- I mean, I know there's like WeChat and is it Line, but those are in separate countries. Is there anything going on in the United States or Europe that would compete with you here in just RCS ?
Jeffrey George Miller - President, CEO & Director
Yes. Certainly, in the OTT -- yes, in the OTT messaging marketplace. In other words, there are a wide variety of messaging applications that do, I'll call it, represent some form of messaging competition for subscribers and their attention, including Instagram, WhatsApp, Facebook and so forth in that regard. Line is the Japanese example that you cited, WeChat, the Chinese example, but none of them have gained that kind of critical mass.
And the distinction that the carriers have and the distinction that is still their opportunity to capitalize on is a bit of a higher level of consumer trust that seems to exist among the mobile operators in the United States and their relationship with subscribers. In terms of how they treat and communicate transparently, how their data is treated and how they protect the messages and the integrity of those messages?
And just to provide a simple example, in Japan, the collection of operators, the consortium that we work with have differentiated themselves from Line, which is their OTT competitor, and they have attracted the financial institutions, as we've reported on prior earnings calls, to utilize the plus message service as their means for communication out to their constituents.
So it is the financial community, and everyone understands the importance of critical security related to financial communications. That is what they're using the Plus Message service, and it's distinguishing themselves from what OTT line provider is doing so in Japan, sort of separating themselves as the trusted messaging provider. I suspect a similar approach will be taken in the United States.
Jon Robert Hickman - MD of Equity Research & Special Situations Analyst
Okay. And then I have a question for Jeff. So do you have a target gross margin as you get towards the end of the year?
Jeffrey George Miller - President, CEO & Director
I think you probably meant to say, David.
Leslie Gahagan
I mean, I'm sorry. Yes, I did. I meant to say David.
David D. Clark - CFO
I think in my remarks -- yes, sorry. I think in my remarks, I indicated that we were targeting going up as the year progressed, so that we're at 57%, that would imply maybe getting in the very low 60s. We achieve our -- obviously, deliver our revenue and achieve -- and continue to maintain costs.
Operator
Next question comes from the line of Mike Latimore of Northland Capital.
Unidentified Analyst
This is (inaudible) on for Mike. Congrats on a great quarter. I believe you were more tightly integrating messaging and cloud software. Could you give me like what's the status of that?
Jeffrey George Miller - President, CEO & Director
Between the platforms is what you're saying?
Unidentified Analyst
Yes.
Jeffrey George Miller - President, CEO & Director
Today, most of the work that we're doing actually deliver solutions that are largely independent for messaging, whether it's core e-mail or even advanced RCS messaging and that of cloud. There certainly is potential we see over time that RCS messaging, which is a rich experience on web like experience for messaging could incorporate and drag in content that could be accessible from a cloud, but we have no new product updates to share on that today.
Unidentified Analyst
All right. And can you describe the types of revenue sources you expect from Japan this year versus last year?
Jeffrey George Miller - President, CEO & Director
I'm sorry, could you repeat the question? I didn't quite get that.
Unidentified Analyst
I think...
David D. Clark - CFO
Did you ask the revenue sources from Japan this year versus last year?
Unidentified Analyst
Yes, right.
David D. Clark - CFO
Okay. I mean, I think we just -- I just indicated in my remarks that we expect continued subscriber growth on the platform in Japan, and therefore, are expecting some license revenue related to messaging to come through in Japan in the latter part of this year.
Jeffrey George Miller - President, CEO & Director
And I would characterize that as being a similar expectation as 2020 in general. But as David said, mostly second half expectation.
Operator
Next question comes from Richard Baldry of ROTH Capital.
Jeffrey George Miller - President, CEO & Director
Can't hear Richard Baldry. You there?
Sounds like we lost Richard in some capacity. Are there any other questions?
Operator
I am showing no further questions at this time. You may continue.
Jeffrey George Miller - President, CEO & Director
Well, let me just thank everyone for joining us today. I greatly appreciate you investing time with Synchronoss. We again are pleased with the first quarter. It was a solid start to 2021, and we look forward to speaking with you again. Thank you, and have a great afternoon.
David D. Clark - CFO
Thank you.
Operator
This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.