C3.ai Inc. (AI) CEO Stephen Ehikian didn't sugarcoat things on Wednesday. After months of missed targets, leadership upheaval, and what he called "unacceptable" sales execution, he's trying to right the ship at the enterprise AI company. The question is whether the underlying business is strong enough to bounce back.
A Slight Relief After a Rough Stretch
C3.ai posted second-quarter results that managed to clear Wall Street's bar, which counts as a win given the recent chaos. The company reported a loss of 25 cents per share, better than the 33-cent loss analysts were bracing for, on revenue of $75.15 million that came in just above expectations.
That sounds fine until you remember what happened last quarter. C3.ai's first quarter was rough: revenue came in at $70.26 million, dramatically short of the nearly $95 million analysts expected, with a bigger adjusted loss than anyone wanted to see. So while this quarter's numbers look decent, they're really just a modest recovery from a pretty significant stumble.
What Went Wrong: Health Issues and Sales Chaos
When Patrick Walravens from Citizens JMP Securities asked what happened, Ehikian was direct. Sales execution "fell off" and it was "unacceptable," he said. But there were reasons, and they weren't just excuses.
Former CEO Thomas Siebel had already explained how his own health complications played a role in the company's decline. Siebel disclosed earlier this year that he was diagnosed with an autoimmune disease that caused significant vision impairment. Back in August, he acknowledged that this condition, combined with a major restructuring of C3.ai's global sales and services teams, seriously impacted performance.
Ehikian added that the sales reorganization created unexpected disruption and led to missed opportunities. It's one of those situations where changes meant to improve things actually made them worse in the short term.
The Optimistic Case: Strong Demand, Real Technology
Here's where Ehikian gets bullish. Despite everything that's gone sideways, he says the demand environment for enterprise AI is robust and possibly stronger than he expected when he joined the company. He pointed to customer feedback, value being delivered in recent deployments, and the strength of the internal team as evidence that C3.ai can get back to growth.
"There's work to be done. So I'm not going to say it is easy. But I know the market is there, the technology can deliver. It's purely like I got to drive this business is what you're hearing from me," he said.
When analysts pressed him on whether C3.ai can actually reach profitability, Ehikian said he's confident but staying focused on consistent execution. That's the kind of answer that sounds good but doesn't commit to much.
On Wednesday, C3.ai closed at $15.01, up 4.42% for the day, though it slipped 1.73% to $14.75 in after-hours trading. Market data indicates that C3.ai is showing a downward trend across short, medium, and long-term timeframes.