Question-and-Answer Session

Operator

(Operator Instructions) Our first question is coming from the line of Steven Ju, Credit Suisse.

Steven Ju – Credit Suisse

Hey, guys. So, I know historically you have talked about launching a new market at a not too fast and not too slow pace. But as the operating profit dollars from your existing cores that you’ve already launched, continue to build, do you think about accelerating the pace of new market rollouts?

And second as you look at the historical performance of your cohorts, at what point in terms of either claimed businesses or reviewed businesses or whichever metric you choose to look at does Yelp become a destination site and your engagement volume accelerate? And of your 96 global markets, how many do you think have reached that inflection point? Thank you.

Geoff Donaker

Sure. Hi. This is Geoff, COO. And let me start with the first part of your question. You asked a question about sort of our historical approach of continuing to launch new markets but going not too fast and not too slow. That will continue to be the theme for 2013 and beyond. Certainly, our high level goal would be to bring Yelp to the world. But we don’t want to get out over our skis.

The focus for this year internationally is going to be on Europe, as we continue to solidify the Qype acquisition and integration over the next few months and continue to bring Yelp to some new markets both within the countries that we’ve launched and a handful of new countries as well.

And I’d like to ask you to repeat the second part of your question because actually I didn’t quite get it around the tipping point there.

Steven Ju – Credit Suisse

Yes. So, as you look at the historical performance of some of your cohorts, I mean, at certain point as you continue to gather either reviewed businesses or claimed businesses, and at a certain point you reach some sort of a tipping point and you might see some showing either engagement or traffic accelerate as you become more of a destination site. So I’m just wondering like when that typically happens for any given cohort and of your 96 global markets, how many do you think have reached that tipping point?

Geoff Donaker

Sure, thing. So, I definitely understand the question, what I would say is that although we have used the term tipping point or inflection point to reflect time at which a market becomes really useful or Yelp becomes particularly useful in that market, what I would say is that there’s not really a quantitative specific number that goes into that.

That having been said, I think it would be fair to assume that at least half of our existing markets are at that point now, where you could go and use Yelp in that market and find that we’re really useful as a destination to find anything from dentist to car mechanics and everything beyond that. And then, associated with that, you’d have significant consumer traffic associated with that point as well.

Rob Krolik

Yes. Steven, this is Rob. I think also what we typically said in the past is from a monetization standpoint, it’s 18 to 36 months before we even monetize or start monetizing the market and that’s obviously begun now in London, with the Qype acquisition we’re expecting to accelerate in Europe and that’s kind of how we’re looking at it.

Operator

Your next question is coming from the line of Brian Fitzgerald with Jefferies.

Sachin Khattar – Jefferies

Hey, guys. It’s Sachin sitting in for Brian. Two quick questions. The first, you guys have talked about being able to turn on impression by, say, advertising on the app. I think you said your goal was to have it done by the end of last year 2012. So, I was wondering if you could talk about progress around that. And then my second question is can you talk about the recent programs in gift certificates and the Yelp Menu that you guys recently rolled out? Thanks.

Jeremy Stoppelman

Sure. This is Jeremy. So, we have rolled out 100% of our apps or app traffic, mobile ads and its performing well. In fact, 25% of the ads shown by Yelp are shown in our mobile apps, so it’s been a success. Of course, as mobile continues to grow as part of our traffic, we expect that even more ads will be shown but they’re performing as we anticipated, and so we’re happy with that.

On the product side, we built for – just in time for the holidays, gift certificates, that’s gone well. Business centers can post gift certificates. We have many thousands. They get created, self-served by local businesses. So, that’s off to the races, but obviously, it’s still very early days there.

Another thing we highlighted was our enhanced Menus feature and I think that’s a really cool showcase of the depth of content that Yelp has. So, if you dive into a particular menu, we didn’t just take the basic menu information which is of course widely available. There’s people you can license it from or you can go and collect it. But what we’re able to do with our deep content is match a specific dish to reviews that mention that dish, and we can also then match against photos where we have a caption that specify that it’s the same thing.

So, it’s actually a very visual, very rich experience. And even judging – looking at how often a dish is measured, we’re able to pull up popularity, so we can – so if you land on a restaurant, we can potentially specify exactly what dishes are the most frequently mentioned and you can dive in and look at that. And so, it’s been a really nice win for consumers and we’ve gotten a lot of positive feedback around it.

Sachin Khattar – Jefferies

Great. Thanks very much.

Operator

Your next question is from the line of Jason Helfstein, Oppenheimer.

Kevin Gieraltowski – Oppenheimer

Hi, this is – can you hear me?

Jeremy Stoppelman

Yes.

Kevin Gieraltowski – Oppenheimer

This is Kevin on for Jason. Can you talk about your sales efforts in international markets, how is demand for local ad space? And also how much of your revenue guidance is coming from international markets? That’s it.

Rob Krolik

Okay. Yeah, I’ll take the second part of that at least. So, on the revenue guidance, we’re not guiding international revenue. What we had said previously, I think at the end of Q3 for the Q3 earnings call is that about $6 million of revenue in 2013 we would expect to come from Qype acquisition, but we’re not giving any specific guidance. That being said, in the fourth quarter, there’s probably about 4.5% of our revenue that is coming from international overseas markets and about two-thirds of that was coming from Qype.

Kevin Gieraltowski – Oppenheimer

Okay.

Rob Krolik

And in terms of your first part of your question, it was around – say that again? Okay, next question then.

Operator

Your next question will be from the line of Youssef Squali, Cantor Fitzgerald.

Youssef Squali – Cantor Fitzgerald

Thank you very much. Two questions please. I guess maybe either Geoff or Jeremy. Can you talk a little bit about the brand advertising business? I think last quarter you talked about some execution issues there, was flat sequentially – I’m sorry year-on-year. I was wondering how those execution issues are being addressed and when do we expect to see resumption of growth in that line item?

And then second maybe for Rob, looks like your active local business accounts were up about 3,800, which was towards the lower end of what you’ve done if you just look at the last three or four quarters. We would’ve actually expected that number to be up a little higher considering that you’ve opened up UK for monetization, maybe if you can just address that point and what’s implied in your guidance in that business.

Rob Krolik

Hey, Youssef, this is Rob. Maybe I’ll take part of these questions and then if Geoff and Jeremy want to jump on, that’s fine. In terms of the display advertising, I think what we first need to remember, it’s a pretty small portion of our business. But that being said, we’re pretty confident that the changes that we made in the fourth quarter, the team that’s in place right now is doing a great job and we held flat which is about what we expected for Q4, a little bit above actually.

And then going into 2013, we feel pretty comfortable with the changes that are made that we’ll be able to deliver. Again, it’s not necessarily the focus. The focus is on local ad revenue and so local ad revenue grew at over 80%, 85% in fourth quarter. So, that’s really where a bulk of our resources are being spent. But, as far as the local – as far as the display side, we’re feeling good about that.

In terms of active local accounts, one thing that’s not in there is the local accounts for Qype. It just – as we migrate their customers over to our platform, we’ll incorporate them in. So, a little bit apples and oranges but – so it’s probably – the absolute number is probably a bit higher. That said, in the fourth quarter, we generally see a little bit of a slowdown versus any other quarter in the year given the holiday season in Thanksgiving and Christmas.

Youssef Squali – Cantor Fitzgerald

Was there anything in the fourth quarter of 2011 that would have driven that number sequentially up?

Rob Krolik

Yeah, it was the – when we launched Yelp Deals.

Youssef Squali – Cantor Fitzgerald

Got it. Okay. All right. That’s helpful. Thank you.

Rob Krolik

Sure.

Operator

Your next question is coming from the line of Kaizad Gotla, JP Morgan.

Kaizad Gotla – JP Morgan

Great. Thanks for taking the question. A couple here, first, can you just talk about how many of your claimed local business locations are outside the U.S.? Just trying to get a sense for sort of the immediate opportunity for your sales team to call on there? And then, can you also just talk about how you’re pricing the product overseas? Should we assume a similar $300 type of monthly rate? Thanks.

Geoff Donaker

Yeah, thanks for the question. So the claimed local businesses outside the U.S., we don’t give that number, we just give in total. And so, as we grow and get bigger, we’ll look at that, but that’s not a number today that we give out by geography.

Jeremy Stoppelman

It’s also worth noting, this is Jeremy, that it’s not really a funnel, like you don’t have to be claimed to purchase advertising. So, when we’re reaching out to a business, we’re able to sell any local business in our database, and so they don’t have to take that first step of claiming, just as a FYI. And, Geoff, did you want to?

Geoff Donaker

Sure. And, I guess, last but not least, that’s reflective of the approach that we’re taking with international sales in general. What you’ll sort of see is that the approach that we’re using in the UK and coming soon some other markets as we fold that Qype sales team into the Yelp sales team, is effectively the products that we’re offering and the price points that we’re offering in those European markets are really going to mirror what we’ve already been offering in the U.S. and Canada, which is to say, for the most part, those who pay on a sort of flat subscription type basis will be buying packages anywhere from the $300 to $1,000 a month level. But then, of course, we have a range of performance-based pricing options as well that advertisers have the ability to sort of dial up and down as they’d like as well.

Kaizad Gotla – JP Morgan

Okay, thanks. And, how do you think about the decision to offer mobile as a separate and maybe premium ad format since you’re seeing pretty good engagement there?

Geoff Donaker

Yeah, we, of course, did consider that opportunity. And, at this point, the obvious choice was really just to be agnostic and make sure that we deliver the best possible ads for both consumers and advertisers, irrespective of platform. So, as an increasing portion of our consumer base starts to access Yelp through these alternative platforms, whether it’s tablet or smartphone or the next thing to come out, we just again we want to show the best ad that we possibly can.

I think pricing, as we think about the package piece of our business, again those $300 and up packages, pricing leverage is a future option for us, but it’s not one that we’re focused on at this time given that we’ve only got 40,000 paying accounts in this sort of ocean of millions of small businesses out there.

The last thing I would offer there is just on the performance-based advertising piece of the equation, as people are paying us on a pay-per-call or a pay-per-click basis, there, a higher click-through rate from, say, mobile will actually take care of itself as the bid prices go up and as obviously price per impression goes up as well.

Operator

Your next question is coming from the line of Scott Devitt, Morgan Stanley.

Scott Devitt – Morgan Stanley

Hey, thanks. First question is on the 2013 guidance, implies a double-digit EBITDA margin. So I was wondering if you could just walk through the leverage points that get you there from current levels to make sure that we – we’re modeling it correctly?

And then secondly, a bigger picture question on ROI, I was just wondering relative to some of the other platforms that exist, big and small, Google and Angie’s List come to mind. How you’re able to measure ROI for advertisers both existing and then potential clients that you go out to? What type of tools are in place to measure the returns? I’m just trying to get an understanding of how advertisers think about your platform in terms of true yield measurement versus a more brand or awareness spend which is naturally less measurable? Thanks.

Rob Krolik

Hey. Thanks, Scott. So to your points about leverage, that’s really – a lot of it obviously will come in sales and marketing. So, I mean, one thing that I’d kind of call out, and I think we even said it obviously in the prepared remarks, is that if you strip out the international investment, we had about 50% in sales and marketing as a percent of revenue in the fourth quarter.

So, I think we’re gaining a lot of traction in that leverage model. I think as you go forward into 2013, we’re absorbing the Qype acquisition. So I think you will notice a little bit of bump in sales and marketing as a percent of revenue to 62% in Q4. I think that bump will continue into Q1 as we absorb that, but going throughout the rest of the year, you’ll see a steady decline.

And then GA and product development, while we’re obviously going to invest in those areas, as a percent of revenue, it should come down. So, I think the majority of the leverage is going to come in sales and marketing and we feel good about obviously the guidance that we provided.

And then on your question about advertiser ROI, one of the important milestones from 2012 was the introduction of an improved business owner dashboard, where business owners are able to see all the details of the customer leads they’re getting, whether those are phone calls from a mobile device or clicks or somebody looking for directions to a specific business or purchasing a Yelp deal. And all of those, of course are great evidence of a customer lead. What you can imagine that you’ll see in 2013 will be a continued evolution of that product line so that we can help the business owners even better close that loop and focus on what their ROI is for their Yelp spend, whether or not they’re paying us for advertising.

And so, there’ll be some natural extensions of that product like helping them understand when and from whom that mobile call came so that they can ultimately figure out how much revenue was associated with it and whether or not that was associated with a Yelp ad click or not and then ultimately calculators and things of that nature to help them to close that loop and figure out how much revenue did they actually generate from their spend on Yelp.

So those will be some of the things that we continue to focus on this year. The survey work that we’ve done to this point suggests that overall, advertiser ROI is actually strong and competitive with some of those other marketplaces you mentioned.

Scott Devitt – Morgan Stanley

Okay. Thank you.

Operator

Your next question is from the line of Rohit Kulkarni, Citibank.

Rohit Kulkarni – Citibank

Thank you for taking my questions. First one on local ad revenues, they appear to have accelerated quite nicely despite tougher comps. Any color you can provide as to what led to this acceleration and how we should think about going forward? And second one on 2013 revenue guide, in particular, it seems around Europe, it seems to be going to be a bigger focus. So any broad stroke macro assumptions you’re making or just making around Europe versus U.S.? Thank you.

Rob Krolik

Hey, thanks for the question. So, on the local ad side, yeah, I mean it grew 87% year-over-year I think in Q4, and Q3 is 82%. I think if you take out the Qype, it probably accounts for around 5% or so of that, still obviously matching the Q3 2012 year-over-year increase. So, I just think it’s great execution from the sales team, they are really delivering. I think the interest from businesses is continuing to be strong in the product. I think the ROI, the repeat rate is at 72%. In Q4 of 2011, it was 67%. So, I think people are seeing benefits from being on the Yelp platform and advertising with us and we’re proud of that.

As to the question about what is our revenue guidance for Europe, I wouldn’t want to get into specifics about geographies at this point. I think we established our London sales team in Q3. We think very highly of what they’re doing, they’re making good progress every single month, it’s great to see. Obviously, we have now the addition of the Qype team on the ground and they’re obviously doing well. So, we feel good about that, but I’m not going to break it out separately at this point.

Rohit Kulkarni – Citibank

Okay. Thanks, Rob.

Rob Krolik

Okay.

Operator

Your next question is from the line of Aaron Kessler, Raymond James.

Aaron Kessler – Raymond James

Yes, hi, guys, a couple of questions. First, just on mobile, you talked a little bit about them. Can you give us a sense of are you seeing incremental revenues at this point from mobile or is that more if you get larger ad commitments or freeing up more inventory at some point? And also just in terms of the revenue model going forward that you talked about, can you give us a broad sense of maybe how much is kind of the core subscription offering versus CPC or click-to-call? And do you foresee maybe offering a dynamic pricing model more in the future as well? Thank you.

Rob Krolik

Okay, let me take that first question, maybe Geoff can follow up with the second. On the mobile side, yeah, we saw 25% of our impressions coming from mobile, that’s app and mobile web that are being served up on those platforms. And so it just means that 25% of our ad impressions are being on the mobile device, which we’re pretty pleased with – and if you think about our ad, mobile ad platform went live at the end of November.

But remember that when a business, generally speaking, buys a product from us, at least the vast majority are buying subscription-based services, and a portion of those impressions can go to mobile or desktop or wherever we decide what’s the best solution for the – obviously, the consumer and also the advertiser. So, we don’t record revenue in the sense that it’s specific to mobile, but it gives a good indication that where our impressions are being served on the mobile platforms. And the fact that we’re being able to fulfill inventory demand organically through the mobile, we also feel is a very strong position to be in. Geoff?

Geoff Donaker

Sure, sorry. Season allergies here. Okay. Jumping into your other question about performance-based pricing. We do actually already have performance-based pricing and, in fact, bid-based auction pricing mechanisms built behind the scenes at Yelp. So today, all of our national and local advertisers are actually already running – those who want to buy on a CPC or a pay-per-call basis, are already running on a bidded basis and those bids happen on sort of the usual suspects, it depends again on the category, keyword, geography, combination that that advertiser is running on. As you can imagine, the next steps would be to roll that out to self-serve at all of our local advertisers who are choosing to pay on a pay-per-call or pay-per-click basis.

I think you asked for a sort of a contrast between the package pricing and the performance-based pricing, and the way I think about that is the package pricing is really for those folks who want to set it and forget it and they want to spend $300 or $500 a month, know exactly how many impressions they’re going to get and then really not be able – not have to think about it again until this time next month when they may go in and check their performance metrics. Whereas those performance-based advertisers may be actually checking in every day or two to look at how their program is going and want the ability to sort of dial-up and down spend.

Aaron Kessler – Raymond James

Thank you. And just a quick follow-up on, I think last year you gave international EBITDA drag I think of roughly $15 million for 2012. Do you have a similar number for 2013? I may have missed it.

Rob Krolik

Yeah. We haven’t given that out this time. I mean, with the Qype acquisition, it becomes a little bit more difficult to do that, but – and also now, we’re generating some revenue from overseas. I guess, the way to think about it I think through the nine months ended September we were around $8 or so million on Yelp itself and I’d say – and we spent about $3 million in the quarter – in the third quarter.

I’d say from Yelp’s perspective, we’ve probably spent about $3 million or so, maybe a little more in the fourth quarter. And then on top of that obviously, we had the Qype acquisition, which is all overseas.

Operator

Your next question is coming from the line of Todd Van Fleet, First Analysis.

Todd Van Fleet – First Analysis

Hi, good afternoon, guys. It doesn’t sound as though you’re really differentiating the pricing either by vertical or based on either mobile versus the PC. It really only sounds as though it’s based on the size of the subscription, so I guess question one is I’m wondering how Yelp decides on which platform to serve the ad? One.

Second question would be if you anticipate allowing the advertiser, the merchant to determine or have input into how they want the ads being served, be it PC or mobile, because I can’t believe that the ROI is the same for both platforms? And then the third, I guess, question which is probably a bit unrelated is I’m wondering if you have any plans to try to get into the middle of the transaction kind of similar to what we’re seeing happen with maybe some of your other colleagues in this space, so I’ll let you address that.

Geoff Donaker

Hey, Todd. It’s Geoff. I guess first off, we do differentiate pricing quite a bit across all these things. But I guess to your second and related question, we don’t differentiate specifically for those who are paying on a package mobile versus tablet versus PC. And we think for now, that’s actually the right approach, i.e. you’re right that the ROI theoretically can vary. We don’t actually get the request much at all for people to say I just want to run on one device versus another kind of device. So, that just hasn’t been a priority to this point, always something we could offer in the future if that turns out to be important.

I think what you have to remember about our business though is that because we’re local search, at the end of the day if I’m searching for a mattress to buy, it probably doesn’t matter if I’m accessing that through an iPad or a smartphone or a PC because really, I’m just looking for a mattress and whichever mattress store shows up there, it’s probably going to have a similar ROI across devices. And generally speaking, that’s what we’ve been seeing. So, I think that will continue to be the focus.

We do differentiate pricing though, of course, both through the auction based behind-the-scenes system as well as kind of on the front end of the rate card for the packages because (inaudible) mattress stores and coffee shops have a very different ability and propensity to pay on a per-click or a per-impression basis.

And then (inaudible) the last part of your question that was – oh sorry, yeah, getting in the middle of the transactions. Actually, we have a number of ways in which we’re already in the middle of the transaction and those include Yelp Deals, Yelp gift certificates, things like our relationship with OpenTable where you can make a reservation. And I think that will be a continuing theme and you’ll see more and more of that from us in the years to come, although we really are focused on the advertising portion of our business which is likely to be the bulk of our business for a very long time.

Operator

Your next question is from the line of Darren Aftahi, Northland Securities.

Darren Aftahi – Northland Securities

Thanks for taking my question. I just have one. It looks like app usage grew about 1 million though was flat over the last couple of quarters and I was wondering if you could talk about the direct impact you have with the relationship with Apple on mobile app downloads. And in the fourth quarter specifically, have you seen any potential adverse impact from the launch of the Google Maps application? Thanks.

Jeremy Stoppelman

Sure. This is Jeremy. So, if you go back and look at Q3 and Q4 of last year, we were adding about 1 million users per quarter, 1 million unique device users. And so that’s pretty good, we feel great about how the app is performing and overall looking at the Apple relationship, it’s very positive. I can’t say that we’ve really seen any kind of negative impact from Google Maps being on the phone. And so things continue and we’re very happy with the relationship.

Operator

Your next question is from the line of Tom White, Macquarie.

Tom White – Macquarie

Great. Thanks for taking my question. I was wondering if you could maybe update us on the percentage of revenues that you guys are generating from particular verticals, specifically maybe restaurants in the home and local services space. I think at the time of the IPO or at least the last S-1, restaurants were around 42% of user reviews, about 17% of revenues. Have you guys had any better success of monetizing that restaurant category? Do you think that it’s a chance that maybe the revenue per tonnage will kind of approach the usage or the review percentage?

And then just secondarily on the comments on the prepared remarks about closing the loop. If you step back, maybe Jeremy or Geoff, step back and think about sort of the Holy Grail of providing ultimate and sort of concrete ROI to local businesses, how do you think Yelp may sort of fit into that piece of things, be it around payments or maybe having some sort of point of sale solution at the local merchant to really kind of give advertisers perfect ROI, thanks – or at least perfect ROI calculations? Thanks.

Geoff Donaker

Okay, thanks. So, in answer to your first question about the local revenue as a category percentage. So, I believe we gave that out in Q2, and we gave that out in the S-1. It actually hasn’t materially changed, it’s about the same. So, just to kind of go over the top five, we had 22% coming from home and local and this is 22% of local ad revenue. We had 17% coming from restaurants to your point, it’s about the same as before and then 15% coming from beauty and fitness and then health is about 11%, and shopping is about 11%.

So, your comment about the number of reviews versus the percentage of revenue that we’re getting from a category, we just don’t think of it that way. I think there’s going to be a lot more reviews written on a restaurant because hopefully you go to eat more often than you have to get a plumber. So, maybe the two are related. But at the end of the day, you’ll write more reviews about a restaurant. So, I think that’s how we look at it and we’re pretty happy with the percentage that we have. We don’t know that it will necessarily increase or decrease. We have our sales folks talking to various different businesses and talking to them about what the benefits of Yelp can be and it can benefit any business – local business that comes down to our platform.

Rob Krolik

And I think that’s a good segue to the second part of your question around ROI and that Holy Grail. I mean, the way in which a plumber measures the success of his local advertising program is going to be really different from the way a restaurant might think about it or a real estate agent or a doctor, right? And each one of these things kind of has their own way of thinking about closing the loop in their own way that you as a consumer might actually pay. And some of these are cash-based businesses, many are credit card businesses and many are something new that may or may not evolve.

I think you’ll continue to see us, back to Todd’s question, experiment in transactions and be more and more part of that closed loop. And at the same time, there will always be many cash-based local businesses out there, at least for the foreseeable future. And so for those, we’ll continue to try to provide them more and more tools, so they can evaluate their ROI and the ultimate revenue they generate from Yelp on their own.

Operator

We have time for one final question. That final question is coming from the line of James Cakmak, Telsey Advisory Group.

James Cakmak – Telsey Advisory Group

Hi. Thanks for taking my question. You’ve been investing heavily to expand your overseas efforts and most recently accelerated by the Qype acquisition last quarter. Can you just talk broadly about the learnings that you’ve had overseas, the successes as well as the hurdles that you have any kind of what’s giving you the optimism that we can replicate the achievements that you’ve had in the U.S.?

And then secondly, with Facebook’s announcement of the Graph Search, does that change your thought on the competitive landscape at all or is the fact that you’re having a growing mix of users coming directly to your app insulate you guys from those threats? Thank you.

Jeremy Stoppelman

This is Jeremy. So, I’ll touch on Facebook first. As we think about it, the thing we’re most excited about is that Yelp is just or sorry that local is just enormous market. And with an enormous market, you attract a lot of competition and virtually every year, there is someone launches in this space that makes waves or captures media attention.

But we’ve been here since 2004, just focused on one thing and doing it well and that’s connecting people with great local business. And the communities that we built have generated incredibly rich deep content that is very hard to replicate and I don’t think anyone, certainly not overnight, is going to impact the business. So from an overall competitive standpoint, we feel very comfortable with our position.

So, then your other question was looking at international overseas and how do we know that that will be successful as we have been in the U.S. First off, the playbook is working, so wherever we’ve launched a Yelp market, it’s taking hold; a community is forming and we know that that takes time. And we also know that we don’t necessarily get the halo effect that we do when we launch a domestic market because in the U.S., Yelp is so big. If we’re going to a new place like Singapore, we’re almost starting from scratch, so there is that.

But we had this opportunity to acquire Qype and in doing so, we now have an asset with a lot of content that we can incorporate into the Yelp platform. And also a lot of traffic; we reported they had over 15 million monthly uniques and that continues. And so, as we integrate that content and subsequently that traffic, we feel like that’s going to give us an acceleration in Europe. So, regardless even without Qype, the playbook was working and over time, we know that Yelp would be very likely to be just as successful as in the U.S., but we do feel some conviction that Qype will help accelerate that process.

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, with that final question, that does conclude today’s Yelp conference. We thank you for your participation and you may now disconnect. Have a great day.