ManpowerGroup (MAN) Q1 2026 Earnings Transcript

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DATE

Thursday, April 16, 2026 at 8:30 a.m. ET

CALL PARTICIPANTS

  • Chief Executive Officer — Jonas Prising
  • Chief Financial Officer — John McGinnis
  • President and Chief Strategy Officer — Becky Frankiewicz

TAKEAWAYS

  • Reported Revenue — $4.5 billion, representing 3% constant currency growth on an organic basis.
  • System-wide Revenue — $5 billion, reflecting system-wide expansion including the franchise base.
  • Adjusted EBITDA — $61 million, up 5% in constant currency; adjusted EBITDA margin of 1.4%, a 10 basis point increase year over year.
  • Gross Margin — 16%, with a 70-basis point staffing margin decline from mix shifts and bench utilization, a 20-basis point reduction from permanent recruitment, and a 20-basis point decrease from other services.
  • Adjusted EPS — $0.51, slightly above guidance midpoint, while reported EPS was $0.05 due to $0.46 in restructuring and transformation costs.
  • SG&A Expense — $695 million reported; adjusted SG&A down 4% in constant currency, primarily from $23 million operational cost reductions and a $1 million impact from dispositions, offset by a $38 million increase from currency changes.
  • Transformation Savings — A strategic transformation program targeting $200 million of permanent cost savings in 2028, with back-office savings realized in Europe and implementation of front-office transformation starting in North America.
  • Manpower brand growth — 6% growth organically in constant currency globally, marking seven consecutive quarters of U.S. growth and four quarters globally.
  • Experis performance — Decreased 9% organically in constant currency, primarily from reduced health care IT project volume in the U.S.
  • Talent Solutions segment — Declined 1% organically in constant currency; RPO business remains challenged but sequentially improving, while MSP and Right Management grew.
  • Regional revenue drivers — Americas up 4% to $1.1 billion, Southern Europe up 3% to $2.1 billion with Italy up 8% and France flat, Northern Europe down 1% to $790 million, Asia Pacific Middle East up 8% to $510 million, with Japan up 4%.
  • Free cash flow — Outflow of $135 million, improved from $167 million outflow in prior year; primarily impacted by timing in MSP payments and working capital, which are expected to reverse in subsequent quarters.
  • Guidance for next quarter — Projected constant currency revenue growth of 1%-5%, adjusted EBITDA margin to increase by 10 basis points, and adjusted EPS between $0.91 and $1.01.
  • AI and technology investments — Nearly 90% of global business now operates on the PowerSuite platform; 80% of the workforce is using AI in workflows, and 25,000 AI-led interviews reduced screening time by 67% with 87% candidate satisfaction.
  • Restructuring and transformation charges — $26 million in the quarter, with expectations for ongoing charges averaging $10 million-$15 million per quarter through year-end.
  • Net debt and balance sheet — $225 million in cash, $1.1 billion in total debt, resulting in net debt of $922 million; gross debt to trailing 12 months adjusted EBITDA of 2.86x and debt to total capitalization at 36%.

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RISKS

  • Gross profit margin below guidance range due to “lower bench utilization in Europe and mix shifts impacting staffing margin.”
  • Experis brand revenue and gross profit down 9% and 11%, respectively, attributed to reduced health care IT project volume in the U.S, with “RPO business continues to experience a sluggish permanent hiring environment.”
  • First-quarter cash outflow of $135 million, with management stating, “We expect free cash flow to be negative in the first half of 2026.”
  • OUP in Northern Europe negative $3 million, despite year-over-year improvement, indicating continued pressure in the region.

SUMMARY

ManpowerGroup (MAN 4.36%) reported $4.5 billion in revenue with 3% organic constant currency growth, supported by strong Manpower brand expansion and disciplined SG&A reductions. Management detailed a global transformation program targeting $200 million in permanent cost savings by 2028, leveraging automation and AI across operations that already serve nearly 90% of the business through the PowerSuite platform. Despite ongoing restructuring charges, improvements in Italy and stabilized performance in other key geographies underpin the company’s progressive margin outlook and capital allocation strategy.

  • Nearly 80% of employees now use AI in their workflows, and 25,000 AI-led interviews reduced screening time by 67% with high candidate satisfaction, highlighting tangible process efficiencies.
  • Adjusted free cash flow, though negative, improved year over year, as management anticipates second-half reversal driven by payment timing and working capital normalization.
  • Ongoing restructuring charges are expected to decline sequentially in 2026, with associated program costs contributing to future structural margin gains.
  • Debt metrics remain stable, with gross debt to adjusted EBITDA at 2.86x, providing management with flexibility for portfolio adjustments and transformation execution.

INDUSTRY GLOSSARY

  • PowerSuite Platform: ManpowerGroup’s proprietary, cloud-based global technology infrastructure enabling integration, automation, and unified data capabilities across its workforce solutions operations.
  • RPO (Recruitment Process Outsourcing): A staffing service model where a third-party provider manages part or all of a company’s recruitment activities.
  • MSP (Managed Service Provider): A business model where workforce management, typically of contingent labor, is outsourced to a specialist provider such as ManpowerGroup.
  • OUP (Operating Unit Profit): Segment-level operating profit, as adjusted by ManpowerGroup for management and reporting purposes.
  • Bench Utilization: Refers to the proportion of placed staff available for assignments relative to the total pool, directly affecting staffing margins and gross profit.

Full Conference Call Transcript

Jonas Prising. Sir, you may begin.

Jonas Prising: Good morning, and thank you for joining us for our first quarter 2026 conference call. our Chief Financial Officer, Jack McGinnis; and our President and Chief Strategy Officer, Becky Frankiewicz, are both with me today. For your convenience, our prepared remarks are available in the Investor Relations section of our website at manpowergroup.com. I’ll begin with a brief overview of the quarter, including how we’re seeing conditions evolve across our markets, and then I’ll share a few updates on how we’re positioning Manpower Group to win in any environment.

Becky will then provide an update on how we are driving commercial excellence and the opportunities for capturing with the eye, followed by Jack who will walk through the detailed financial results and our guidance for the second quarter of 2026. I’ll close with a few comments before we open the line for Q&A. And Jack will now cover the safe harbor language.

John McGinnis: Good morning, everyone. This conference call includes forward-looking statements, including statements concerning economic and geopolitical uncertainty, which are subject to known and unknown risks and uncertainties. These statements are based on management’s current expectations or beliefs. Actual results might differ materially from those projected in the forward-looking statements. We assume no obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements. Slide 2 of our earnings release presentation further identifies forward-looking statements made in this call and factors that may cause our actual results to differ materially and information regarding reconciliation of non-GAAP measures.

Jonas Prising: Thanks, Jack. Our Q1 results reflect disciplined execution and continued stabilization of revenue trends across key markets. In the first quarter, we delivered reported revenues of $4.5 billion representing an organic constant currency growth of 3%. System-wide revenue, which includes our expanding franchise revenue base, was $5 billion. Adjusted EBITDA margin of 1.4% reflects improving demand trends as well as P&L leverage. We’re also encouraged that top line growth exceeded our expectations, reflecting strong execution of our commercial initiatives. We are expanding our new business pipeline, increasing client engagement and continue to win in the areas where growth is strongest and most resilient. At the same time, the manufacturing environment is strengthening, particularly across Europe.

Taken together, this is enabling us to drive continued momentum across the portfolio with strong manpower performance among key markets, including France, U.S. and Italy. We’re also seeing stable underlying trends in Experis and solid performance in talent solutions, Papin MSP and Right Management, even as RPO remains more challenged. Our diversified portfolio, global scale and specialized brand expertise continue to position us well to win in the marketplace. As we move down the P&L, we have continued our relentless focus on driving operating leverage. During Q1, we reduced SG&A as adjusted by 4% in constant currency, while delivering continued top line growth reflecting the impact of our ongoing efficiency efforts, something I’ll share more detail on shortly.

Finally, we’re closely monitoring developments related to the conflict in the Middle East. While it is still too early to assess if there will be a broader impact, like many global companies, we have become accustomed to navigating a fast-changing environment that includes geopolitical developments, alongside economic and labor market shifts. In the meantime, we have been focused on staying close to our clients and their evolving needs while managing the business with discipline. Against this backdrop, we’re encouraged by the developing short-term momentum and equally excited by the long-term market opportunity.

This is supported by improving business confidence in the U.S. as evidenced by the increase in CEO confidence reported by the conference board, rising manufacturing PMLA in the U.S. and Europe and strong business resilience. As conditions improve, we expect sustainable organic revenue growth to build progressively. Our intent is to be the architects of our own future and to proactively take actions that will position Manpower Group to lead the industry, win in any environment and drive long-term value creation. We are transforming our business model to drive growth and expand margins over time.

As part of this commitment, we are announcing a transformation initiative that will reimagine how we operate and deliver value to our clients and candidates and provide significant cost optimization. Over the past year, we have been doing significant planning to launch this work, and we are pleased to share more details with you today. We have made targeted investments in automation and AI and build a modern global technology infrastructure, including our PowerSuite platform, which now serves as the backbone of our digitization strategy.

With nearly 90% of our global business operating on this platform, we have created a unified technology stack with access to global data across all of our global businesses, enabling us to operate at the unique data scale, strengthen our insights and be better partners to our clients. As a result of these investments, we are launching a strategic global transformation program that we expect will deliver in permanent cost savings in 2028. There are 2 major components to our plan. The first, which I’ve talked about before, is the complete redesign of our back office operation, which is progressing well.

The second is taking best practices and key learnings from our back-office transformation and executing a similar program for the front office. These redesign processes will be industry-leading and enable us to execute more effectively and move faster to fill roles. In addition to reducing our cost structure, this transformation will improve both client and candidate experience, positioning our brands to win in market share and better serve clients in a highly fragmented marketplace. We have begun this work in North America, redesigning end-to-end processes, embedding automation and AI where it simplifies work, creating best-in-class local world blueprints before extending globally.

The goal is clear: Connect more people to work by selling more orders to drive growth while structurally lowering our cost to serve. I am also pleased to announce that we have recently hired a dedicated Chief Enterprise Transformation Officer who has joined our executive leadership team to drive the execution of this plan across the enterprise. At the same time, we continue to thoughtfully review our global portfolio to ensure that we have the right mix of businesses and brands across key markets. Prioritizing investments in core, higher return opportunities while evaluating opportunities to divest noncore assets to strengthen our financial position and support our long-term growth and margin ambitions.

Ultimately, these actions will accelerate our path back to our historical margin profile and create a structural cost basis to expand margins further over time. Now before I hand it over to Becky, let me just say one more time how excited we are about the transformation underway to improve efficiency, reduce costs and create capacity to invest in growth. Core elements of this transformation is building new capabilities that align with where the market is heading. And this includes evolving how we bring innovative service to market, particularly with AI.

We’re also encouraged by the immense opportunities AI is creating as it enables us to shape the future of our industry, including how it is influencing client behavior and how they buy more for solutions. This shift creates a meaningful opportunity for us to evolve our business model so that AI becomes a sustainable tailwind by operating in new ways and developing new products for our clients. And with that context, let me turn it over to Becky to go deeper into our commercial initiatives and how we are leveraging AI.

Becky Frankiewicz: Thank you, Jonas. Last quarter, I shared that my remit is focused on driving commercial excellence strengthening and expanding our core capabilities and accelerating AI across the business. Today, I am pleased to share more on how we are embedding AI as a growth multiplier and we’ll highlight where AI is already driving measurable value in 3 areas: unlocking effective commercial scale, creating new ways to deliver a best-in-class talent experience and finally, monetizing new human plus agentic solutions for our clients through strategic AI partnerships. Let me start with how we are embedding AI into our processes to unlock effective commercial scale. The teams can focus on coverage where sales conversion and revenue impact are the highest.

We expect this incremental revenue to increase significantly as we scale. Second, let me share how we are creating a differentiated talent experience. One that is critical to attracting and retaining the skilled associates and consultants our clients value most. To strengthen our talent experience, we recently announced an expansion of our PowerSuite technology platform to include our partnership with hubert.ai to deliver AI-powered screening and interview experiences. In the past 6 months, we’ve completed over 25,000 AI-led interviews and reduced screening time by 67%. The Automating early-stage interviews helps improve fill rates and time to hire and freeze our recruiters and talent agents to focus on higher-value relationship-driven work.

At the same time, we are achieving 87% candidate satisfaction as more than half of this activity takes place outside of traditional working hours, meeting talent when and where works for them. These responsible, transparent AI capabilities now support markets, representing 40% of our global revenue with plans to scale to 70% by year-end. And third, monetization. I am delighted to share how we are bringing AI capabilities to market and creating a future where people can build more impactful careers and where companies can achieve greater profitable growth. Human plus agentic workforces are not a future concept. They are already here.

In March, we announced a breakthrough partnership with Sound hold AI, a global leader in voice and conversational AI. Our Experis U.S. business is already helping companies across industries to review and redesign workflows and accelerate the adoption of AI and intelligent automation. This is the lead offering in our Accelerate AI services suite built on a simple and powerful premise that humans and agents can deliver more when working side by side. This partnership expands our presence in the human plus AI space, which is central to our strategy. We are starting in the U.S. to drive scale and market leadership and plans expand globally.

Finally, we know we capture the impact of AI by ensuring that our teams are equipped to use it. We are pleased that tens of thousands of our employees around the world. have completed AI fundamentals training and over 80% of our workforce is already using AI in their workflows. Our approach is simple. Automate which should be automated, augment what should stay human and create entirely new ways to deliver workforce solutions to our clients. We are in progress to capture the full value of these initiatives and we expect AI to become an increasingly meaningful driver of growth, productivity and differentiation over time.

We look forward to continuing to update you on our strategic progress and how we will move at pace. I will now turn it back over to Jack.

John McGinnis: Thanks, Becky. I’ll quickly first touch on the headline quarterly results, and I’m excited to give more details on our expanded transformation savings, Jonas announced at the beginning of the call. In the first quarter, we delivered reported revenues of $4.5 billion. System-wide revenue, including franchises was $5 billion. Our first quarter revenue results represented constant currency growth of 3%. The U.S. dollar reported revenues after adjusting for currency impacts, came in at the top of our constant currency guidance range. I will talk more about the revenue trend drivers in the business and geographic segment summaries.

Gross profit margin came in below the low end of our guidance range, driven by lower bench utilization in Europe and mix shifts impacting staffing margin, while permanent recruitment came in as expected with sequential improvement. As adjusted, EBITDA was $61 million, representing a 5% increase in constant currency compared to the prior year period. As adjusted, EBITDA margin was 1.4%, up 10 basis points year-over-year and came in at the midpoint of our guidance range. Organic days adjusted constant currency revenue increased 3% in the quarter, which was favorable to our midpoint guidance range of 1% growth.

Coming back to our transformation programs that Jonas referenced, we are excited to announce our path to expected savings of $200 million in 2028. We have previously discussed the implementation of our leading cloud-enabled power suite front and back-office technology platforms. These platforms are now being complemented with best-in-class end-to-end processes. We started with back office processes and are flipping to run rate savings in IT and finance costs during 2026, which build through 2028, representing 25% of the total cost savings. The strategic transformation will expand to the rest of the world in 2027 to drive expected net savings in 2028.

The front office transformation, like the back office will include standardized processes, infused with leading automation and Agentic AI across all major businesses driving significant structural savings. We will continue to break out restructuring and strategic transformation program charges as we progress the program. We expect the ongoing 2026 run rate of these charges to be lower than the first quarter amount and estimate a range of $10 million to $15 million on average per quarter through the end of the year. Moving to the EPS bridge. Reported earnings per share for the quarter was $0.05. Adjusted EPS was $0.51 and came in just above our guidance midpoint. Walking from our guidance midpoint of $0.50.

Our results included a slightly lower operational performance of $0.02 and a slightly lower tax rate, which had a positive $0.01 impact. A foreign currency impact, it was $0.01 worse and improved interest and other expenses, which was $0.03 better than our guidance. Restructuring costs and strategic transformation program costs represented $0.46. Next, let’s review our revenue by business line. Year-over-year, on an organic constant currency basis, the Manpower brand had strong growth of 6% in the quarter, up sequentially from the 5% growth in the fourth quarter. The Experis brand declined by 9%, an expected decrease from the 6% decline in the fourth quarter, largely driven by the timing of health care IT projects in the U.S.

The Talent Solutions brand declined by 1%, an improvement from the fourth quarter decline of 4%. Within Talent Solutions, our RPO business continues to experience a sluggish permanent hiring environment, but did see sequential revenue trend improvement. Our MSP business saw continued revenue growth and Right Management also grew during the quarter. Looking at our gross profit margin in detail, our gross margin came in at 16% for the quarter. Staffing margin contributed a 70 basis point reduction due to mix shifts in bench utilization in the first quarter. Permanent recruitment activity resulted in a 20 basis point decline. Other services resulted in a 20 basis point margin decrease. Moving on to our gross profit by business line.

During the quarter, the Manpower brand comprised 62% of gross profit. Our Experis Professional business comprised 21%, and Talent Solutions comprised 17%. During the quarter, our consolidated gross profit decreased by 3% on an organic constant currency basis year-over-year, stable from the 3% decline in the fourth quarter. Our Manpower brand was flat in organic constant currency gross profit year-over-year relatively stable considering rounding from the 1% growth in the fourth quarter year-over-year trend. Gross profit in our Experis brand decreased 11% in organic constant currency year-over-year a decline from the 5% decrease in the fourth quarter, largely driven by the timing of health care IT projects in the U.S.

Gross profit in Talent Solutions declined 5% in organic constant currency year-over-year, which was an improvement from the 12% decrease in the fourth quarter. The improvement in trend was driven by RPO as the rate of decline narrowed significantly. MSP rends also improved from the fourth quarter and Right Management had solid gross profit growth in the quarter on increased outplacement activity. Reported SG&A expense in the quarter was $695 million. as adjusted, was down 4% on a constant currency basis. The year-over-year constant currency SG&A decreases largely consisted of reductions in operational costs of $23 million. Dispositions were very minor and represented a decrease of $1 million, while currency changes contributed to a $38 million increase.

Adjusted SG&A expenses as a percentage of revenue represented 15% in constant currency in the first quarter. Adjustments representing restructuring and strategic transformation program charges were $26 million. Balancing gross profit trends with strong cost actions while funding ongoing transformation to enhance EBITDA margin in both the short and long term remains one of our highest priorities. The Americas segment comprised 25% of consolidated revenue. Revenue in the quarter was $1.1 billion, representing an increase of 4% year-over-year on a constant currency basis. As adjusted, OUP was $26 million and OUP margin was 2.3%. Restructuring charges of $7 million largely represented actions in the U.S. The U.S. is the largest country in the Americas segment, comprising 59% of segment revenues.

Revenue in the U.S. was $655 million during the quarter, representing a 5% days adjusted decrease compared to the prior year. as adjusted for our U.S. business was $9 million in the quarter. OUP margin as adjusted was 1.3%. Within the U.S., the Manpower brand comprised 26% of gross profit during the quarter. Revenue for the Manpower brand in the U.S. increased 5% on a days adjusted basis during the quarter, which represented strong market performance with 7 consecutive quarters of growth and a slight change from the 7% increase in the fourth quarter as we anniversary strong growth in the prior year. The Experis brand in the U.S. comprised 39% of gross profit in the quarter.

Within Experis in the U.S., IT skills comprise approximately 90% of revenues. Experis U.S. revenue decreased 15% on a days adjusted basis during the quarter, down from the 10% decline in the fourth quarter as the business anniversaried strong health care IT projects in the prior year. Excluding the impact of health care IT project volumes in the prior year, Experis U.S. revenue decreased 9% on a days adjusted basis during the quarter, largely in line with the fourth quarter trend. Talent Solutions in the U.S. contributed 35% of gross profit and saw a 2% decrease in revenue year-over-year in the quarter compared to a 2% increase in the fourth quarter, driven by lower sequential MSP activity.

This was partially offset by strong growth in Right Management outplacement activity and improving RPO year-over-year trends. We expect the U.S. business to flip to low single-digit percentage revenue growth in the second quarter on an improved Experis revenue trend. Southern Europe revenue comprised 47% of consolidated revenue in the quarter. Revenue in Southern Europe was $2.1 billion, representing 3% growth in constant currency during the first quarter. As adjusted OUP for our Southern Europe business was $58 million in the quarter, and OUP margin was 2.8%. Restructuring charges of $4 million represented actions in France. France revenue equaled $1.1 billion and comprised 51% of the Southern Europe segment in the quarter and was flat on a constant currency basis.

As adjusted, OUP for our France business was $21 million in the quarter. Adjusted OUP margin was 2%. France revenue trends improved during the first quarter, and we expect a similar rate of revenue trend of flat to slight growth in the second quarter. Revenue in Italy equaled $475 million in the first quarter, reflecting an increase of 8% on a days adjusted constant currency basis. OUP as adjusted equaled $29 million and OUP margin was 6%. Our Italy business is executing well, and we estimate mid-single-digit percentage revenue growth in the second quarter. Our Northern Europe segment comprised 17% of consolidated revenue in the quarter. Revenue up $790 million represented a 1% decline in organic constant currency.

As adjusted, OUP was negative $3 million in the quarter. This represents year-over-year OUP improvement during the last 2 quarters reflecting cost actions taken to date. The restructuring charges of $5 million primarily represent actions in the Nordics and the U.K. Our largest market in the Northern Europe segment is the U.K. which represents 34% of segment revenues in the quarter. During the quarter, U.K. revenues decreased 2% on a days adjusted constant currency basis, representing ongoing stabilization. The remaining countries in the region progressed as expected with largely stable to improving revenue trends. The Asia Pacific Middle East segment comprises 11% of total company revenue.

In the quarter, revenues equaled $510 million, representing an increase of 8% in constant currency. As adjusted, OUP was $22 million and OUP margin was 4.3%. Our largest market in the APME segment is Japan, which represented 57% of segment revenues in the quarter. Revenue in Japan grew 4% on a days adjusted constant currency basis. We remain pleased with the consistent performance of our Japan business, and we expect continued solid revenue growth in the second quarter. I’ll now turn to cash flow and balance sheet. In the first quarter, free cash flow represented an outflow of $135 million compared to an outflow of $167 million in the prior year.

The cash outflow was negatively impacted by the end of the first quarter payment timing involving our MSP business and to a lesser extent, some isolated working capital utilization, and we expect these items to reverse in the second quarter. We expect free cash flow to be negative in the first half of 2026, which will be offset by strong free cash flow during the second half. At quarter end, days sales outstanding was 59 days, up 4 days from the prior year reflecting enterprise mix shifts and isolated quarter end timing on certain receivables. During the first quarter, capital expenditures represented $9 million, and we did not repurchase any shares.

Our balance sheet ended the quarter with cash of $225 million and total debt of $1.1 billion. Net debt equaled $922 million at quarter end, an increase from year-end, reflecting first quarter seasonality. Our adjusted debt ratios at quarter end reflect total gross debt to trailing 12 months adjusted EBITDA of $2.86 and total debt to total capitalization at 36%. Detail of our debt and credit facility arrangements are included in the appendix of the presentation. Next, I’ll review our outlook for the second quarter of 2026. Our forecast anticipates a continuation of existing trends, with that said, we are forecasting earnings per share for the second quarter to be in the range of $0.91 to $1.01.

Guidance range also includes favorable foreign currency impact of $0.05 per share and our foreign currency translation rate estimates are disclosed at the bottom of the guidance slide. Our constant currency revenue guidance range is between a 1% increase and a 5% increase, and at the midpoint is a 3% increase. Considering business days are equal year-over-year and the impact of dispositions is very small. Our organic days adjusted constant currency revenue increase also represents 3% growth at the midpoint. EBITDA margin for the second quarter is projected to be up 10 basis points at the midpoint compared to the prior year. We estimate that the effective tax rate for the second quarter will be 43%.

I will continue to carve out any restructuring and global strategic transformation program costs incurred, and they are not included in the underlying guidance. In addition, we estimate our weighted average shares to be 47.7 million. I will now turn it back to Jonas.

Jonas Prising: Thanks, Jack. In closing, as the market continues to stabilize, we’re operating well, staying focused and executing with discipline. Our team remains hyper-focused on delivering for the now while a dedicated group advances our transformation initiatives to position us for future opportunities. I look forward to keeping you updated on our continued execution as we build on the progress we’ve made and capture the momentum ahead. As always, thank you to our talented team for their relentless focus and to our candidates and clients for your continued trust. Operator, please open the line for questions.

Operator: [Operator Instructions]. Our first question comes from Andrew Steinerman with JPMorgan.

Andrew Steinerman: So it’s good to be back to growth here and thinking about the guide of organic constant currency, same-day basis of 3%, it’s pretty similar to the first quarter. So would you call Manpower business in a recovery mode, like leaning towards acceleration here? Would you more call it at a point of a stable growth?

Jonas Prising: Good morning, Andrew. Yes. No, I think we’re very pleased with the improving momentum in the Manpower business. You saw an acceleration between Q4 into Q1. We’re now anniversary-ing strong growth again. And as Jack said, we’ve had 7 quarters of growth in manpower in the U.S., 4 quarters globally. So it’s really nice to see the manpower business performing better and with momentum. And it’s great to notice that despite all of the uncertainty and the volatility in the markets, the underlying economic activity is resilient, yet uncertain, and that is, as we know, a good opportunity for us to provide our services and workforce solutions to our clients under the Manpower brand.

Andrew Steinerman: Can I just ask a follow-up to that unit. So obviously, moving forward in the still uncertain environment leans towards flexible labor solutions. One of the things I heard about when I presented at the Staffing Industry Analyst Conference is that companies are unsure of their medium-term plans for their workforce because of AI. And that might lean currently towards more flexible solutions as that’s figured out. Do you think that’s just a theory — or do you think that’s happening in the marketplace and kind of part of the growth leaning forward for manpower?

Jonas Prising: From Manpower, that would not really be a factor because it’s very resilient to any AI impact, and I’m sure we’ll talk later on around the impact in other areas and the opportunities above all that we see with AI. I think it’s basically an uncertainty related to the economic environment and outlook. Employers are getting buffeted by geopolitical events, tariffs, wars that are ongoing or started, and that clearly drives employer hesitation. So in our mind, the client hesitation is more related to those events than any particular concerns or possible impact of AI into their workforce.

Operator: Our next question comes from Jeff Silber with BMO.

Jeffrey Silber: Wanted to shift gears and focus on some of the transformation savings that you talked about. Is it possible to give us a bit more color either by geographic regions where we might see more of those transformation services and also the timing by geographic regions? Are there certain regions we’re going to see it ahead of others.

Jonas Prising: Thanks, Jeff. Yes, let me just before I hand it over to Jack to provide some more of the details, maybe take a step back and provide a bit of context around this global strategic transformation program. As we’ve talked about over a number of quarters, we’ve been investing very heavily in a digitization strategy that impacts all of our operations. So we’re deploying global applications across our operations.

We have also engaged in a significant back office transformation program and based on those investments and the experience and capabilities that we’re accumulating, and as Becky mentioned in the prepared remarks, the increased confidence that we see in the role that AI can play in improving our operations and delivering better services and solutions to our clients and candidates we have been planning for a year now to really broaden this transformation program to also include our front office and really redesign our processes in a way that leads the industry and enables us to do things and drive our business in a very different way in the future.

But so maybe, Jack, you could now give a little bit more detail around the announcement we made this morning.

John McGinnis: Yes. And specific to your question, Jeff, on geography impact. So I think the way I talk about it, as you see, this is both the back office program, which we progressed nicely and as Jonas said, building on that, moving that to the front office processes. So you see in the chart that we provided on Slide 7 that the initial savings are coming through the back office. So that majority of the savings is coming from the European region, where we started a lot of our back office processes first.

And that’s both finance and IT coming through in terms of the standardization and centralization we’ve seen there on the technology, of course, that we’ve been talking about for quite some time. And as we move forward now with the front office, we’re actually starting in North America. And so as you see the geography impact and you see the green in that bar chart, moving to front office savings, you’ll see North America come through first in 2027. We’re doing all that work now in 2026, and it’s launched very well, and we’re very excited about the progress so far.

And then as we go to the rest of the world in 2027 following that blueprint from North America, you’ll see more broader savings in the rest of the regions coming through in 2028. So and that’s on the front office side. On the back office side, as I mentioned, starting in Europe, we’re actually in the process of doing North America and wrapping up North America on the back office process now. And so that will contribute to some of those additional savings on the blue component of that bar chart into 2027.

Operator: Our next question comes from Kartik Mehta with Northcoast Research.

Kartik Mehta: Jack, if you just look at the gross margin trends, you talked about maybe the impact staffing it’s having on it. And I’m wondering how much of that is just mix? Is it just enterprise demand versus SMB demand that you’ve seen in the past? Or is pricing having an impact now?

John McGinnis: Yes. Thanks, Kartik. So let me talk to that. I guess what I’d take you back to is the second half of 2025. And at that time, we were seeing enterprise mix shift continue to have an average and have an impact on the overall staffing margin. And when we show the staffing margin walk, year-over-year, you can see that having an impact. And as we went from the third quarter to the fourth quarter, we actually saw that stabilize the level of staffing margin decrease from the enterprise mix kind of held steady and the issue at that time was more perm.

Perm was coming in softer and was driving a bit of that GP margin decrease — further decrease year-over-year. And so as we walk into the first quarter here, I think the story is perm actually has stabilized. Perm actually came in a little bit better sequentially than the fourth quarter. So that really wasn’t the driver getting back to the staffing, really what happened in the first quarter. And the first quarter is traditionally when you will start to see maybe some of the bench impacts from the bench countries, and that’s where absenteeism and sickness has a bit of a role. And we saw an outsized impact on that in the first quarter.

So that went against us on the staffing line that drove roughly somewhere 10 to 20 bps of additional headwind. And as Jonas said, our growth was very strong. So that growth is predominantly enterprise. And so that growth came in a bit stronger and drove a little bit more pressure on just the averaging of the mix shift. But I’d say that’s really what’s happening, and that’s what we’re seeing right now. Enterprise continues to be the strongest part of the demand. And that’s how I’d characterize what we’re seeing. I do — as you do see in my guide going from Q1 to Q2, we do see it strengthening.

And that is after we removed the drag associated with the bench issues in the first quarter, which are traditionally more of a winter phenomenon as we move into the second quarter.

Kartik Mehta: So Jack, just to make sure. So you don’t think it’s a structural issue right now. It’s just more of a timing issue and maybe seasonality issue because of the bench countries..

John McGinnis: That’s correct. That’s correct, Kartik. At this point, pricing is always very competitive. But at this point, we continue to think pricing is rational. It’s predominantly a mix shift with enterprise being the strongest demand at the current time.

Operator: Our next question comes from Mark Marcon with Baird.

Mark Marcon: Early in your remarks, you talked about the strengthening that you’re seeing in Europe. I’m wondering if you could just provide a little bit more color and also what you’re hearing from your European colleagues with regards to any concerns around the impact of the war and whether you think that continued that strengthening can continue? And then I’ve got a follow-up on the restructuring.

Jonas Prising: Good morning Mark, yes. No, we’ve been very encouraged with the improvement that we’ve seen in a number of or countries in Europe. And largely, you could say that Southern Europe continues to be very strong in a number of markets. You’ve seen our results in Italy, again, the market-leading very strong growth. It’s our third biggest market globally. So we’re very pleased with that, but also other countries and very pleased also to see France come back to flat. And Northern Europe continued to improve. Still a lot of work to do for us in Northern Europe, but we’re encouraged with the progress that we’re making.

And I think as you see our guide into the second quarter, you see we expect that improvement to continue. And a lot of that is underpinned by what we briefly mentioned earlier, which is this economic resilience, the labor market resilience, the improvement in PMIs in all of our major markets today, PMI is above the expansionary levels, so above 50%, which has been a long time coming, and we can see that. So despite the uncertainty that despite the volatility that companies are experiencing, they have become adapt to be agile in this environment. They are interested and believe that this volatility and these uncertainties will subside and they need to continue to move their business forward.

And we’re very pleased to see that they’re doing that with us to a greater degree in the first quarter as well and looking good also into the second quarter. As it relates to the events in the Middle East this time, it’s really too early to assess if there will be a broader impact. Today, we don’t see an effect on customers, and we’ve been really encouraged by the resilience and adaptation to the rapidly changing environment more broadly. So companies have gotten used to a volatile environment, and they are looking past the noise to the signals, what they need to achieve as a business and they are moving forward.

So, so far, as you can tell from our guide, we’re not seeing and including any other effects, which, of course, we’re monitoring. And should anything happen, of course, we will take the actions that you’ve seen us take in the past. We have an experienced management team. We are used to managing in this environment. And as you can see from our results, we’re executing with discipline and adjusting to any changes that we see happen. But you had a follow-up question for Jack.

Mark Marcon: Yes, over for you. In terms of just the restructuring, you mentioned the charges that you’re anticipating through the end of this year. Would those do you foresee further restructuring charges going into ’27 and ’28. How should investors think about the cash flow impacts of those restructuring charges and the timing of those. And then as it relates to the savings, from a timing perspective, would — when we talk about the $200 million, would that basically be kind of a run rate savings toward the end of ’28? Or could we expect all of those savings to actually hit in ’28?

And what percentage of that would you actually expect to drop down to the EBITA line as opposed to being, potentially being redeployed for other uses?

Jonas Prising: Mark, that is definitely a Jack question. You managed to work in 5 questions into that swap. So Jack…

John McGinnis: No, thanks for the question, Mark. And so obviously, this is a big program for us. So I understand the questions on the charges. So the way I would answer it is, if you look at that split that I provided for 2026, yes, there is severance in the restructuring in the mix. A part of it and a big part of it is the program transformation costs, right, as well. So as we look at the rest of 2026, it’s basically 1/3 restructuring and 2/3 program. And as I mentioned, that’s lower than the run rate in the first quarter. The first quarter, we had a bit more restructuring that included Europe, of course, and some other things.

As you think ahead to 2027 I would say, in terms of the program costs, that will continue, maybe even be a bit slightly higher restructuring at this stage is a little too early to tell. And I’ll give further guidance on that as we get through 2026. There’s a couple of different variables there. So if the environment stays very static and stable as it is today, then you should expect restructuring will increase. If we start to see some good recovery trends, then it could be very different as we redeploy people into higher growth processes, so that will — that could reduce restructuring as we go to the rest of the world after 2026.

So a bit too early, but with all of that kind of getting at the heart of your question, we’re managing this very carefully based on cash and resources and we will continue to do that. So we continue to be very focused on improved free cash flow for the full year, and we’re going to balance that, as I said in the prepared remarks, the ongoing cost reduction savings are going a long way to fund these activities, and that’s going to continue to be our playbook as we go forward. So a very careful balance.

Mark Marcon: I guess, getting to the heart of the question, like we would — let’s say we’re in a constant run rate by the end of 28 with these programs being put in place, how should investors think about like what’s a reasonable EBITDA margin target for Obviously, you’re not giving guidance. But just if we’re just taking a look at this program, how — theoretically, how should we think about it?

John McGinnis: Yes. And good point. I meant to answer that part of the question as well, Mark. So thanks for the reminder. So to answer your question, we anticipate the full $200 million coming in, in 2028. So not run rate in the fourth quarter of 28% for the full year based on the work we’re doing this year and next year. That will flip to a $200 million run rate savings in 2028. And as I mentioned, a little too early to anticipate if there’s additional restructuring that runs into 2028. We’ll give updates on that in the future.

But as we think about the impact of the program, that is what we anticipate to be the benefit to the cost structure. So in terms of the guide on, I guess, the financial target that we continue to be firmly committed to the 4.5% to 5%. As we’ve said in the past, you can do the math on this, but if you just apply the $200 million to where we’ve been in the last 4 quarters on a run rate basis, basically, that adds 110 basis points to our EBITDA margin in isolation. So right away, running — if I look at last year, we’re running at about 2% adjusted EBITDA margin at 110 basis points.

So that, just in this environment, in this current environment, if we get operational leverage on a stronger recovery, our track record shows that if we start to get a strong recovery, we get very, very good additional operational leverage and we saw that going from ’20 to ’21 where our EBITDA margin expanded 90 basis points and then expanded another 40 basis points the year after as the recovery to coal. So that is — that’s the operational leverage additional part of it. But in isolation, this will go a long way into accelerating our path towards that EBITDA margin commitment.

Operator: Our next question comes from George Tong with Goldman Sachs.

Keen Fai Tong: I wanted to touch on the manufacturing environment specifically. You highlighted how manufacturing is strengthening, particularly across Europe. Can you provide country-specific details on the manufacturing landscape and drivers of the improvement in those countries?

Jonas Prising: Thanks, George. Yes, as you heard me say earlier, you can see the manufacturing environment improving across both the U.S. and Europe by looking at the PMI, and we’ve really seen that be a positive evolution over the last 3 months or so. So I think that gives you an idea that there are different sectors, of course, that are stronger than others, one sector that we feel very good about is the aerospace and defense where we have a very strong position in Europe, and we expect that this is going to grow in terms of the share of our business with the increased spending on defense. So you can see a number of areas that are doing better.

There are a number of industries that are struggling a bit, like automotive, logistics has been a bit weak in some of the markets across Europe. But more broadly speaking, the economy is resilient. The labor markets are resilient, and PMI from a manufacturing perspective is improving both in Europe and in the United States.

John McGinnis: George, you asked about it at a little bit so maybe — I’ll give really take some color on the geography. So if I just look at our manpower business, which obviously, is very tied to manufacturing. As we talked about, the U.S. was up 5% and in the quarter, actually a bit impacted by weather, extreme weather in the quarter, probably was about a 1% drag, so it would have been about 6%. So the punch line, there’s continued strong progress, momentum on manufacturing sector. France, as we mentioned, moved this predominantly Manpower business moved to flat Italy, very strong manufacturing concentration, up 8%. And Spain, very, very strong growth.

You see the double-digit growth that we had in Spain as well. So I’d say pretty broad-based, as Jonas said, from a geography standpoint as well. And that’s what’s really contributing to that global Manpower business, 6% growth in the quarter overall.

Operator: Our next question comes from Manav Patnaik with Barclays.

John Ronan Kennedy: This is Ronan Kennedy on for Manav. If not mistaken, you referenced $200 million of incremental revenue in France from AI-powered sales — how scalable is this globally and which markets represent the next largest opportunity? And then beyond that top line contribution, how is AI changing win rates, pricing discipline customer lifetime values. And when can we expect to see this reflected in margins?

Becky Frankiewicz: Thanks, Ronan, this is Becky, and I’ll take that for you. First, to France specifically, — so we launched an AI-powered sales targeting engine that basically says what’s happening in the market in real time, where do we have strength and our capabilities. We match the 2, and that’s what has demonstrated our revenue growth there. We will scale to 50% roughly of our markets by year-end. So you’ll see that sequence come out as we have future earnings calls. To your next question around how AI overall, as you heard in my prepared remarks, we are very active in that space in 2 parts.

One, internally applying it to our processes, as you heard me talk about with very new strategic partnerships in the AI space with Hubert.AI embedded in our power suite and our recruiting processes, sales targeting, but also how we apply AI externally to create net new products. And so the SoundHound partnership I talked about that’s focused on Experis in the U.S. is really breakthrough in our industry. So we’re leveraging the fact I mentioned on the last earnings call that we have limited exposure to coders, which is a place that has been impacted.

We are shifting that limited exposure to a tailwind for AI in our business by bringing agents and humans together to deliver value for our clients. And so we’re active on a 2-part view with AI in our business and for our clients for new products.

John Ronan Kennedy: That’s very helpful, Becky. And then may I confirm the element of question on expectations for margin implications.

Becky Frankiewicz: Yes. Thank you, Ronan, I mean to answer that for you. Yes, it’s early, Ronan, and so early days for us. We’re very encouraged, one, by our capabilities to bring these tools in quickly to form strategic partnerships in the AI space. We’re encouraged by the margin potential that our early deals have shown, but early days, and we expect us to be able to scale, and I’ll keep you updated as it does.

Operator: Our next question comes from Tobey Sommer with Truist.

Tobey Sommer: I wanted to ask you a relative question on your AI targeting tool as well as your systems investments and reimagining. Where do you think this puts you in terms of market share and, let’s say, the lead on reimagining versus others after 3 or 4 years of declining market there are probably a lot of boards and management teams in front of a whiteboard trying to reimagine and where do you think you are relative to their visions of the future and actions?

Jonas Prising: Well, thanks, Tobey. So as we talked about, we started this journey of creating a global data infrastructure really clearing our technological debt and replacing it with modern cloud-based SaaS platforms that we have now deployed globally, covering 90% of our revenues and 80% of our back office transformation. That is unique in our industry at our scale because we’re doing this on single platforms. We have a global data lake that is covering 100 billion data points, and all of our applications are putting the data into the same data lake. And that has opened up this opportunity for us to really think about our business and how we run our business in a very different way.

We have built experience and capability, of course, going through the back office transformation and reengineering processes there. as Becky will talk more about in a minute, how we’re now starting to see AI has a bigger impact, both in terms of how we interact with clients, how we interact with the talent the kind of insights that we can now bring to our clients that provides added value is what’s really, really exciting to us. And that’s what’s given us the confidence to say that this is something that we think can really reshape our industry can drive faster and higher fill rates and also drive further efficiencies. So Becky, if you take it from there.

Becky Frankiewicz: Yes. Thanks, Tobey. So I lasted a little bit on how you asked the question about white boards because I spent a lot of time on whiteboards lately. Reimagining how this business can run in a totally different way. So the question is, how do we do what we do in a totally different way and add more value to our candidates and our talent and our clients. And so we are looking at AI as a growth and productivity multiplier.

Like we need that 2-party equation, we’re looking to automate what we can and should and keep human what we know our clients and our candidates want to keep human with a very heavy dose of governance on top of it to make sure that we meet the needs and demands of our clients and our candidates. And so we’re encouraged. You asked about where we are in leadership. Obviously, we’re not privy to what everyone is doing, but we feel very good that we are moving with speed in months versus years, and we’ve been doing this for a horizon.

Tobey Sommer: And then if I could ask, if you feel like you’re in a good spot relative to speed and sort of the pace in which you’re executing against your own vision, who’s losing if you, in fact, are winning?

Becky Frankiewicz: Yes. So I would say, again, I don’t quite know how to answer that question directly because what we focus on is our winning versus other people losing and winning to us is actually delivering more value to our clients and keeping our candidates central to our efforts. At the same time, making sure our employees are prepared for this new horizon. So you heard me say in our prepared remarks, we’ve invested significantly internally in time and of our people to make sure they’re trained on using AI tools you’ve not heard a number from us on 80% of our workforce is now using AI on a regular basis.

And so I would say to us, that feels like winning.

Operator: Our next question comes from Trevor Romeo with William Blair.

Trevor Romeo: Just one quick one for me. I was wondering if you could talk about whether you’re seeing erosion get overall…

Jonas Prising: Trevor, sorry, we could not hear any of that question. Could you please repeat the question? You were breaking up. No, we can’t hear you.

Trevor Romeo: Sorry — is that here?

Becky Frankiewicz: A little better.

Trevor Romeo: Hopefully, this is better. I was trying to ask about the overall environment for Experis in the U.S., it sounds like you’re expecting things to get that really professional….

Becky Frankiewicz: Yes. So Trevor, this is Becky. Unfortunately, you dropped out again after a very strong few words. But I believe you’re asking about the environment for Experis in the U.S., and so I’ll answer that, and you might try to move to a better place that we can hear you better. For Experis in the U.S., first, let me take a step back on the question that’s top of mind, which is impact of AI on that business.

So overall, for AI, we feel continued encouragement by the resilience of our manpower business, as you heard both Jack and Jonas refer to in the face of a lot of AI conversations. — for our tech clients, they are cautious on AI spend. They’re being careful about where — are on their project spend. They’re being careful about where they’re investing their money and thoughtful and cautious and a little slow to say yes. But for Experis specifically to your question, we’ve been very encouraged. We have seen our pipeline grow specifically in health care, in life sciences over the quarter.

So we exit the quarter with a robust pipeline we have seen our clients turn to us for advisory. And again, as mentioned, when we talked about the partnership with SoundHound, we’re turning AI into a tailwind for us. So we are actually in a product now. We are selling a product that is agents plus humans. And so that is the future that we see for experience here in the U.S.

Trevor Romeo: Right. I think that was basically the spirit of my question. Hopefully, you can hear me better now. Maybe just — maybe just a very quickly follow-up. It sounds like you’re expecting the U.S. to go back to positive year-over-year. Are you also expecting experience to go back to positive year-over-year? Or would that still be slightly down in Q2?

John McGinnis: Trevor, great question. So you’re right. In the guide, I have the U.S. I said, going to positive growth. And so that is definitely part of the Americas revenue growth that we’re seeing. Experis, we see getting very close to flattish, so revenue trend in Q2 overall. And as I mentioned, what’s really happening there is you see the health care project work, those go-lives. I’ve created a lot of bumpiness year-over-year, that pretty much works its way through as we go into the second quarter. And as I mentioned, on an underlying basis, the business actually has been quite stable. So we start to anniversary some of that and move closer to a flattish type result in Q2.

So we have seen some good stability in the business. Looking at the weeklies, we’re encouraged by some of the consultant headcount increases and we’re taking that into Q2.

Operator: Our next question comes from Josh Chan with UBS.

Joshua Chan: So on the savings, could you just give more color in terms of what is actually being saved to result in the dollar savings? And then relatedly, kind of conceptually, why would the savings be higher in the front office and the back office.

John McGinnis: Yes. So happy to talk about that. I think if you think about the savings, it’s going to really follow a lot of what we’ve already done on the back office. So — what — the way to think about it, Josh, is if we had separate streams and workflow activities in every major business in terms of some of the historical back-office processes, and then we move into global business service centers, like we’ve talked about with our Porto center in Europe for our European locations. What we’re able to do is centralize a lot of work into those hubs, and that is reducing a lot of the infrastructure that we need in country.

And that’s going to continue to be that model on the back office applied to the front office processes. So on the back office, it’s been the finance and IT related functions that have improved their efficiency as a result of this centralization and standardization. And on the front office side, it’s going to be recruiting. It’s going to be sales. It’s going to be service delivery. And when you look at the size of those functions, they’re bigger. I mean it’s 1 of the biggest parts of the business, right, as we think about the front office opportunity. So that’s what’s going to drive it.

And so you’re going to hear us talk a lot more about, you’ve heard us talk a lot about our back office, global business service centers. You’re going to hear us talk more and more. That’s going to be a really critical important part of our centralization of the standardization going forward, and that’s going to benefit our efficiency in our major businesses going forward. So — that’s the way to think about it. It’s continuing what we’ve already done on the back office through similar themes and applying that to big populations of the front office. And then of course, underlying all of that, as you heard from Jonas and Becky will be automation.

Automation is a key element to all of this. and the opportunity of genic AI being infused in that is going to be a real efficiency driver on top of that. So all of that is how we get to those significant front office costs that you’ve seen broken out.

Operator: Thank you. I’m showing no further questions at this time. I’d like to turn the call back over to Jonas Prising, for closing remarks.

Jonas Prising: Thanks, Michelle, and thanks, everyone, for participating in our earnings call this morning. We look forward to speaking with you again at our Q2 earnings call in July. And until then, thanks very much. Look forward to speaking with all of you again soon.

Operator: Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect. Everyone, have a great day.

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