QUERYOBJECT REPORTS RECORD THIRD QUARTER SALES; REVENUES UP 173% Over Previous Third Quarter Third Quarter Net Loss Declines 33% Year Over Year Business/Technology Editors
ROSLYN HEIGHTS, N.Y.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Nov. 8, 1999--QueryObject Systems Corporation (OTC:QUOB)(BSE:QOB) today reported results for the quarter ended September 30, 1999. Total revenues for the third quarter of 1999 were $555,000, up 173% from $203,000 in the third quarter of 1998. Total revenues for the first nine months of 1999 were $1,161,000 compared to $399,000 for the first nine months of 1998. Net loss for the third quarter of 1999 was $1,190,000 ($.17 per share), versus $1,776,000 ($.35 per share) for the third quarter of 1998. Net loss for the first nine months of 1999 was $4,443,000 ($.70 per share), versus $6,104,000 ($1.19 per share) for the first nine months of 1998. "This quarter cements the sales turnaround which first became visible last quarter," said Robert Thompson, Chairman and CEO. "We continue to develop a strong customer following in telecommunications, where our ability to handle data volumes that can't be managed by other products sets us apart." "Equally encouraging," continued Thompson, "the third quarter's results included our first sale to a government account, which was also our first sale of our new QueryObject Analyzer Server for Internet data analysis. Both of these are large steps forward in our mission to make the QueryObject technology the backbone of high content data analysis and data distribution over the Internet." "We are also very excited about the establishment of our Internet subsidiary, iQO.com, which will apply our technology to the much larger market opportunity of the Internet," added Thompson.
Highlights of the company's accomplishments since the beginning of the third quarter include:
-- QueryObject filed a patent application for its internetQueryObject (iQO(TM)) software product, a data mart technology that will be marketed for e-commerce and Internet data distribution applications by the company's new Internet subsidiary, iQO.com.
-- QueryObject completed its $4.5 million private placement of preferred stock. This financing, combined with the company's increased revenues, lower operating losses, and the potential exercise of existing warrants, should position the company to operate without the continued pressure of raising capital for its core business.
-- The company gained additional industry visibility and credibility with potential customers through the publication of complimentary user stories in the leading industry journal, DMReview, from QueryObject customers MCI/Worldcom and Telecom Italia.
-- QueryObject added another major European customer with a contract from Telia, the Swedish telecommunications giant, which is using QueryObject's software to analyze millions of daily call records for its network operations.
-- The company continued its leadership position with the release of QueryObject Version 3.1, which is faster and easier to use. Version 3.1 also makes it even easier for partners to integrate the QueryObject System as a key component of their turnkey analytical applications.
-- QueryObject introduced "free" Internet data analysis software through a new class of Internet servers, called QueryObject Analyzer with a new pricing policy which eliminates user-based fees.
-- A new VP of North American Sales, Brian Berns, joined the company in October. North American sales had been lagging those in Europe, and the company expects to achieve better penetration of North America with its new sales team.
-- Robert Thompson added the Chairman title to his CEO duties. Alan Kaufman, former Chairman, remains an active board member.
-- The company moved to less expensive and better situated new headquarters on Long Island.
-- AmerInd signed on as a federal government reseller for QueryObject, and made the company's first sale to a government agency - an organization of the Department of Defense.
-- QueryObject formed its new Internet subsidiary, iQO.com, and named former eShare executive, Ron Dunaisky, its Senior Vice President of Business Development. iQO.com will use QueryObject's technology and creates specialized versions of these products available to companies selling business information over the Internet and those running Internet portals for vertical industries.
-- The company also announced the formation of iQO.com's first board of directors, which consists of QueryObject Chairman and CEO Robert Thompson, QueryObject Chief Operating and Financial Officer Dan Pess, and two of QueryObject's outside board members - Alan Kaufman and Amy Newmark.
-- QueryObject introduced the industry's first performance guarantee, guaranteeing superior performance versus its competitors' products in Internet-based analysis of strategic business data.
Three Months Ended September 30, 1999 1998 % Change
Total Revenues $ 555,000 $ 203,000 173%
Operating Expenses 1,712,000 1,939,000 -12%
Loss From Operations (1,196,000) (1,756,000) -32%
Net Loss (1,190,000) (1,776,000) -33%
Net Loss Per Share $ (.17) $ (.35) -51%
Nine Months Ended September 30, 1999 1998 % Change
Total Revenues $ 1,161,000 $ 399,000 191%
Operating Expenses 5,494,000 6,439,000 -15%
Loss From Operations (4,432,000) (6,108,000) -27%
Net Loss (4,443,000) (6,104,000) -27%
Net Loss Per Share (.70) $ (1.19) -41%
About the QueryObject System(R)
The QueryObject System allows data intensive organizations such as telecommunications, healthcare and insurance, or financial services companies to achieve competitive advantage by analyzing more data ...in more detail ...more quickly ...over the Internet, or within other corporate environments.
The system easily transforms large volumes of business data into a compact, highly distributable data mart - a QueryObject - that can then be analyzed using industry standard tools and techniques. Where other technologies build subject-specific data marts whose limited content, fixed schema, moderate dimensionality and high levels of aggregation make them suitable for single user-classes and single applications, the QueryObject's high content, polymorphic schema, and high dimensionality permits multiple user classes to access granular level data in support of multiple applications across the extended enterprise. This enables more efficient data deployment with a reduction in administrative overhead.
The QueryObject is the first true Information Age data structure, optimized for data access and distribution over the Internet. Where most databases were designed for client-server transaction processing, the QueryObject is architected for Internet data analysis. Its industry-leading design permits large amounts of source data to be efficiently stored as a densely compressed loss-less mass, while a unique polynomial index provides instant random access to both the cross-dimensional totals and - via match keys - to the supporting transaction level data. The benefits are fast consistent analysis of large data volumes and concurrent support of a large user population.
The QueryObject Engine, which transforms production, warehouse or legacy data into QueryObjects, runs on Mainframe, UNIX and Windows NT servers, allowing organizations to save time by processing the data directly on the platform on which it is stored.
The QueryObject Server, running on UNIX or Windows NT, provides open end-user access to the QueryObject data marts. Support for industry data access standards - JDBC, ODBC and OLE/DB - mean that the QueryObject Server provides a powerful analytical back-end to most Business Intelligence tools, increasing their scalability, query speed and ability to support many concurrent users. QueryObject Server is available as a WEB Edition for Internet Business Intelligence; Enterprise Edition for client-server deployments; and Personal Edition for stand-alone and mobile computing.
For organizations that want to extend data analysis capabilities beyond their traditional BI communities, the QueryObject(TM) Analyzer Server (Unix, NT, Linux) complements QueryObject server strengths by providing web-based users with FREE downloadable access to a multi-dimensional Java client that turns their standard browsers into a flexible, intuitive, analytical client. QueryObject Analyzer empowers the extended enterprise to make better decisions based on easy inexpensive access to all the relevant data.
North American pricing for the QueryObject Engine, regardless of the number of users, ranges from $50,000 to $275,000 depending on platform. Deployment servers are also processor-priced, starting from $15,000.
About QueryObject Systems Corporation
QueryObject Systems Corporation is a publicly-held company headquartered in Roslyn Heights, New York, with a European distribution subsidiary headquartered in Reading, the United Kingdom. Its products are available worldwide through a network of authorized distributors. The company's Internet subsidiary, iQO.com, specializes in the application of QueryObject's technology for data analysis and transport over the Internet, including e-commerce in analytical information.
For more information about QueryObject Systems Corporation and its technologies, or iQO.com, visit the Web site at queryobject.com or iqo.com.
QueryObject, QueryObject Analyzer, internetQueryObject, iQO, and iQO.com are trademarks of QueryObject Systems Corporation. QueryObject System is a registered trademark of QueryObject Systems Corporation.
Yep. Finally revenues are at record level. Jack |