Technology
Powerfleet Reports Results for Fourth Quarter and Full-Year Fiscal 2026
Published
2 hours agoon
By
Revenue of $114.5 million for the fourth quarter, increased 11% year-over-year, driven by services revenue of $92.9 million, up 14%Fourth quarter income from operations improved to $11.0 million from a $7.0 million loss in the prior-year quarter, while net loss improved 78% to $2.7 millionAdjusted EBITDA of $26.4 million for the fourth quarter, up 42% year-over-year, with a margin of 23%Signed a landmark South African National Treasury five-year agreement anticipated to deliver $100 million to $120 million in total contract value
WOODCLIFF LAKE, N.J., June 15, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — Powerfleet, Inc. (“Powerfleet” or the “Company”) (Nasdaq: AIOT), a global leader in the artificial intelligence of things (AIoT) software-as-a-service (SaaS) mobile asset industry, today reported its financial results for the fourth quarter and fiscal year ended March 31, 2026.
“Fiscal 2026 was a defining year for the business. We delivered on our objectives to accelerate growth, compound profitability, and establish a consistent, growing cash flow profile—driving 14% growth in high margin services revenue in the fourth quarter of fiscal 2026, increasing adjusted EBITDA by 42% in the same period, and generating positive free cash flow in the second half of the year,” said Powerfleet CEO Steve Towe. “We are entering fiscal 2027 as a stronger, more focused company with clear visibility into the next phase of our growth. With second-half fiscal 2026 free cash flow improving by $17.8 million, we expect to generate more than $30 million of free cash flow in fiscal 2027, with continued expansion expected in fiscal 2028 as revenue growth, margin improvement, and organic operating leverage compounds.”
Results for Fourth Quarter Fiscal 2026 Compared to Fourth Quarter Fiscal 2025
Revenue increased 11% to $114.5 millionServices revenue increased 14% to $92.9 millionGross margin increased to 56.5% from 52.8% in the prior-year quarterNet loss improved 78% to $2.7 million, and loss per share improved by 7 cents to $(0.02) from $(0.09) in the prior-year quarter
Non-GAAP Results for Fourth Quarter Fiscal 2026 Compared to Fourth Quarter Fiscal 2025
Adjusted EBITDA increased 42% to $26.4 million, with margins expanding by 5% to 23%Adjusted net income increased 102% to $5.6 million and, on a per share basis, doubled to $0.04 per share
Results for Fiscal 2026 Compared to Fiscal 2025
Revenue increased 22% to $443.8 million, at the top of the guidance rangeServices revenue increased 30% to $359.8 millionGross margin increased 180 basis points to 55.5%Net loss improved 60% to $20.6 million, or $(0.15) per share, compared to $(0.43)Operating cash flow increased to $30.5 million from $(3.3) million in fiscal 2025, while continuing to invest in growth through capitalized software development costs of $18.5 million and capital expenditures of $21.6 million.Total outstanding debt was $280.0 million and cash, cash equivalents, and restricted cash was $40.8 million
Non-GAAP Results for Fiscal 2026 Compared to Fiscal 2025
Adjusted EBITDA increased 44% to $97.0 million, with margin expanding to 22%Adjusted net income increased 118% to $11.3 million and, on a per share basis, doubled to $0.08Free cash flow improved $17.8 million in the second half of fiscal 2026, from a use of cash of $13.7 million in the first half to cash generation of $4.1 million in the second half.Total debt, net of cash, cash equivalents, and restricted cash, was $239.2 million. Adjusted net debt to trailing 12-month adjusted EBITDA was 2.47x, representing nearly one turn of improvement from the prior year.
Discussion of Fourth Quarter Results
Revenue for the quarter totaled $114.5 million, an 11% increase from $103.6 million in the fourth quarter of fiscal 2025, driven primarily by 14% growth in high-margin services revenue, which represented more than 81% of total revenue. Gross profit was $64.7 million, and gross margin expanded 370 basis points to 56.5% from 52.8% in the prior-year quarter, reflecting the increasing mix of higher-margin services revenue and improving services gross margins.
Income from operations was $11.0 million, an approximately 10% operating margin, compared with an operating loss of $7.0 million in the prior-year quarter. GAAP net loss improved to $2.7 million, or $(0.02) per basic share, from a net loss of $12.4 million, or $(0.09) per basic share, in the prior-year quarter.
Adjusted EBITDA, a non-GAAP measure, was $26.4 million in the fourth quarter, a 42% increase from $18.7 million in the prior-year quarter, with adjusted EBITDA margin expanding to 23.1% from 18.0%. The improvement reflects the increasing contribution of high-margin services revenue, realized cost synergies, and disciplined operating expense management. A reconciliation of adjusted EBITDA to GAAP net loss, the most directly comparable GAAP measure, is provided in the tables below.
Balance Sheet and Capital Resources
As of March 31, 2026, the Company’s total available liquidity was $63.6 million, comprising cash and cash equivalents of $36.5 million, and available borrowing capacity of $27.1 million under the Company’s existing revolving credit facilities. Total outstanding debt was $280.0 million, and net debt (net of cash, cash equivalents, and restricted cash) was $239.2 million. Net debt to trailing 12-month adjusted EBITDA ratio was 2.47x, an improvement from 3.39x as of March 31, 2025.
Business Highlights
Secured the three largest individual contracts in the Company’s history, including individual $10 million+ TCV contracts with a top three global food & beverage and a global manufacturing enterprise.Signed a landmark agreement with the South African National Treasury to deploy Unity safety solutions, with an anticipated total contract value of $100 million to $120 million over a minimum five-year term and with revenue expected to ramp over the next 18 months.Grew high-quality strategic revenue segments, led by enterprise-grade Unity safety solutions for onsite and AI video on-road applications, with the onsite segment growing 39% in the fourth quarter driven by strong North America sales execution and serving as a key land-and-expand entry point into enterprise mobile operations.Delivered on the adjusted EBITDA expansion cost synergy targets related to business combinations and acquisitions, achieving more than $18 million of annual savings in fiscal 2026 and exiting the year with total realized synergy savings of $34 million over the past two years.Scaled the Unity platform to nearly three million subscribers across 50,000 customers, supported by a differentiated distribution network of more than 350 partners, including AT&T, TELUS, MTN, Telstra, and Accenture, reinforcing the Company’s competitive moat.
Financial Outlook
The Company’s outlook reflects increased momentum exiting the fourth quarter of fiscal 2026 and implies continued double-digit revenue growth at the midpoint of the guidance range, along with further Adjusted EBITDA margin expansion.
Revenue guidance is supported by a larger, higher-quality pipeline and performance is expected to build sequentially throughout fiscal 2027. This progression is expected to be driven by improved pipeline conversion from increased go-to-market investment and the commencement of the South African National Treasury contract in the second quarter. Revenue and margin contribution from the South Africa deployment are expected to accelerate through year-end.
Adjusted EBITDA growth is expected to compound further and outpace revenue growth, reflecting the organic operating leverage in the business. This growth is expected to be driven by a higher mix of services revenue, continued cost discipline, and the benefits of ongoing productivity and cost optimization initiatives. The Company has realized more than $34 million in cost synergies over the past two years and expects to continue investing in centralization, simplification, automation, and AI initiatives during the first half of fiscal 2027. These initiatives require upfront investment in the first half and are expected to yield meaningful savings beginning in the second half. Together with the ramp of the South Africa deployment, these dynamics are expected to drive sequential margin improvement in each quarter of fiscal 2027.
The Company provided guidance for fiscal year 2027 for the following metrics:
Revenue is expected to range from $485 million to $490 million, representing growth of approximately 10% year-over-year at the midpoint of the range. Services revenue is expected to exceed $400 million.Net income is expected to range from $4 million to $8 million, with weighted-average fully diluted shares outstanding of 136 million.Adjusted EBITDA is expected to range from $122 million to $125 million, representing growth of approximately 27% year-over-year at the midpoint of the range, with a margin of approximately 25% at the midpoints of the revenue and Adjusted EBITDA guidance ranges.Free cash flow is expected to range from $30 million to $35 million.
Powerfleet provides guidance for adjusted EBITDA and free cash flow, which are non-GAAP financial measures. Powerfleet does not provide guidance for the most directly comparable GAAP financial measures or a reconciliation of each of these forward-looking non-GAAP financial measures to the most directly comparable GAAP financial measure because it is unable to predict, without unreasonable effort, the timing or amount of certain items that are included in the applicable GAAP financial measure but excluded from adjusted EBITDA and/or free cash flow. These items may include, among others, stock-based compensation, acquisition-related expenses, fair-value adjustments, restructuring charges and other non-recurring items. The variability of these items could have a significant impact on Powerfleet’s future GAAP financial results, and therefore, Powerfleet is unable to provide a reconciliation at this time.
INVESTOR CONFERENCE CALL AND BUSINESS UPDATE
Powerfleet management will hold a conference call on Monday, June 15, 2026, at 8:30 a.m. Eastern time (5:30 a.m. Pacific time) to discuss results for the fourth quarter and fiscal year 2026 ended March 31, 2026, and provide a business update.
Date: Monday, June 15, 2026
Time: 8:30 a.m. Eastern time (5:30 a.m. Pacific time)
Toll Free: 888-506-0062
International: 973-528-0011
Participant Access Code: 931158
The conference call will be broadcast simultaneously and available for replay here. Additionally, both the webcast and accompanying slide presentation will be available via the investor section of Powerfleet’s website at ir.powerfleet.com.
USE OF NON-GAAP FINANCIAL MEASURES
Management evaluates the financial performance of our business on a variety of key indicators, including non-GAAP measures of adjusted EBITDA, adjusted EBITDA margin, adjusted EBITDA gross margin, adjusted net income per share, adjusted EBITDA leverage ratio, free cash flow, net debt and adjusted net debt. Reference to these non-GAAP measures should be considered in addition to results prepared under current accounting standards, but are not a substitute for, or superior to, GAAP results. These non-GAAP measures are provided to enhance investors’ overall understanding of Powerfleet’s current financial performance. Specifically, Powerfleet believes the non-GAAP measures provide useful information to both management and investors by excluding certain expenses, gains and losses and fluctuations in currency rates that may not be indicative of its core operating results and business outlook. These non-GAAP measures are not measures of financial performance or liquidity under GAAP and, accordingly, should not be considered as an alternative to total revenues, net income, net income margin, gross margin, net income per share, net cash provided by operating activities or total debt as an indicator of operating performance or liquidity. Because Powerfleet’s method for calculating the non-GAAP measures may differ from other companies’ methods, the non-GAAP measures may not be comparable to similarly titled measures reported by other companies. A reconciliation of all non-GAAP financial measures included in this press release to the most directly comparable GAAP financial measures is provided in Annex A titled “Non-GAAP Financial Measures,” including a description of these non-GAAP financial measures and the reasons why management uses these measures.
ABOUT POWERFLEET
Powerfleet (Nasdaq: AIOT; JSE: PWR) is a global leader in the artificial intelligence of things (AIoT) software-as-a-service (SaaS) mobile asset industry. With more than 30 years of experience, Powerfleet unifies business operations through the ingestion, harmonization, and integration of data, irrespective of source, and delivers actionable insights to help companies save lives, time, and money. Powerfleet’s ethos transcends our data ecosystem and commitment to innovation; our people-centric approach empowers our customers to realize impactful and sustained business improvement. The Company is headquartered in New Jersey, United States, with offices around the globe. Explore more at www.powerfleet.com. Powerfleet has a primary listing on The Nasdaq Global Market and a secondary listing on the Main Board of the Johannesburg Stock Exchange (JSE).
CAUTIONARY NOTE REGARDING FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS
This press release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of federal securities laws. Powerfleet’s actual results may differ from its expectations, estimates and projections and consequently, you should not rely on these forward-looking statements as predictions of future events. Forward-looking statements may be identified by words such as “expect,” “estimate,” “project,” “budget,” “forecast,” “anticipate,” “intend,” “plan,” “may,” “will,” “could,” “should,” “believes,” “predicts,” “potential,” “continue,” and similar expressions.
These forward-looking statements include, without limitation, our expectations with respect to our beliefs, plans, goals, objectives, expectations, anticipations, assumptions, estimates, intentions and future performance, as well as including our financial outlook and guidance for fiscal 2027 and the anticipated financial impacts of recent business combinations and acquisitions. Forward-looking statements involve significant known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors, which may cause our actual results, performance or achievements to be materially different from the future results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. All statements other than statements of historical fact are statements that could be forward-looking statements. Most of these factors are outside our control and are difficult to predict. The risks and uncertainties referred to above include, but are not limited to, risks related to: (i) the possibility that we may not fully realize the anticipated benefits of our acquisitions and ongoing business transformation initiatives; (ii) significant losses, accumulated deficits and an inability to achieve or sustain profitability; (iii) future global economic, political and business conditions, including inflation, interest rate increases, foreign exchange instability, geopolitical conflicts, sanctions, export controls and the potential imposition of tariffs; (iv) the commercial, financial, reputational and regulatory risks to our business associated with operating across multiple geographies, including exposure to foreign exchange fluctuations and economic instability in certain emerging markets; (v) disruptions in our global supply chain, performance issues or failures by subcontractors, and reliance on a limited number of suppliers for critical components and services; (vi) the loss of any of our key customers, reductions in customer demand or purchasing levels, and reliance on third-party channel partner relationships, including telecommunication companies and regional distributors; (vii) changes in technology, products and customer expectations, which may be more rapid, costly or difficult to address, or less effective, than anticipated; (viii) risks associated with the deployment and use of artificial intelligence and machine learning technologies, including operational, legal, regulatory and reputational risks arising from their development, use or outputs; (ix) potential breaches, disruptions or failures of our information technology systems, including risks that could impair operations, customer access to services, or vendor and customer relationships; (x) our inability to adequately protect our intellectual property rights or defend against third-party intellectual property claims; (xi) our ability to obtain additional capital to fund our operations; and (xii) such other factors as are set forth in the periodic reports filed by us with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), including but not limited to those described under the heading “Risk Factors” in our annual reports on Form 10-K, quarterly reports on Form 10-Q and any other filings made with the SEC from time to time, which are available via the SEC’s website at http://www.sec.gov. Should one or more of these risks or uncertainties materialize, or should underlying assumptions prove to be incorrect, actual results may vary materially from those indicated or anticipated by these forward-looking statements. Therefore, you should not rely on any of these forward-looking statements.
The forward-looking statements included in this press release are made only as of the date of this press release, and except as otherwise required by applicable securities law, we assume no obligation, nor do we intend to publicly update or revise any forward-looking statements to reflect subsequent events or circumstances.
Powerfleet Investor Contacts
Carolyn Capaccio and Jody Burfening
Alliance Advisors IR
AIOTIRTeam@allianceadvisors.com
Powerfleet Media Contact
Jonathan Bates
jonathan.bates@powerfleet.com
+44 121 717-5360
POWERFLEET, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
(In thousands, except per share data)
Three Months Ended
March 31,
Year Ended
March 31,
2025
2026
2025
2026
Revenues:
Products
$ 21,866
$ 21,546
$ 85,584
$ 83,975
Services
81,772
92,944
276,931
359,802
Total revenues
103,638
114,490
362,515
443,777
Cost of revenues:
Cost of products
18,152
15,295
61,961
59,153
Cost of services
30,723
34,531
106,017
138,202
Total cost of revenues
48,875
49,826
167,978
197,355
Gross profit
54,763
64,664
194,537
246,422
Operating expenses:
Selling, general and
administrative
expenses
56,839
48,903
204,361
208,487
Research and development expenses
4,904
4,736
16,061
18,359
Total operating expenses
61,743
53,639
220,422
226,846
(Loss) income from operations
(6,980)
11,025
(25,885)
19,576
Interest income
95
211
926
780
Interest expense
(5,655)
(6,919)
(20,330)
(27,526)
Other expense, net
(202)
(2,311)
(1,163)
(4,086)
Net (loss) income before income taxes
(12,742)
2,006
(46,452)
(11,256)
Income tax benefit (expense)
304
(4,064)
(4,517)
(8,688)
Net loss before non-controlling interest
(12,438)
(2,058)
(50,969)
(19,944)
Non-controlling interest
(1)
(608)
(18)
(608)
Net loss
(12,439)
(2,666)
(50,987)
(20,552)
Preferred stock dividend
—
—
(25)
—
Net loss attributable to common stockholders
$ (12,439)
$ (2,666)
$ (51,012)
$ (20,552)
Net loss per share attributable to common stockholders – basic and diluted
$ (0.09)
$ (0.02)
$ (0.43)
$ (0.15)
Weighted-average common shares outstanding – basic and diluted
132,793
134,153
119,877
133,761
POWERFLEET, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
(In thousands, except per share data)
March 31, 2025
March 31, 2026
ASSETS
Current assets:
Cash and cash equivalents
$ 44,392
$ 36,496
Restricted cash
4,396
4,322
Accounts receivables, net
78,623
93,820
Inventory, net
18,350
22,448
Prepaid expenses and other current assets
23,319
22,094
Total current assets
169,080
179,180
Fixed assets, net
58,011
62,398
Goodwill
383,146
411,995
Intangible assets, net
258,582
255,518
Right-of-use asset
12,339
15,893
Severance payable fund
3,796
4,445
Deferred tax asset
3,934
4,537
Other assets
21,183
21,599
Total assets
$ 910,071
$ 955,565
LIABILITIES
Current liabilities:
Short-term bank debt and current maturities of long-term debt
$ 41,632
$ 50,355
Accounts payable
41,599
46,353
Accrued expenses and other current liabilities
45,327
37,699
Deferred revenue – current
17,375
20,159
Lease liability – current
5,076
3,386
Total current liabilities
151,009
157,952
Long-term debt – less current maturities
232,160
229,669
Deferred revenue – less current portion
5,197
4,005
Lease liability – less current portion
8,191
13,505
Accrued severance payable
6,039
5,666
Deferred tax liability
57,712
60,063
Other long-term liabilities
3,021
3,090
Total liabilities
463,329
473,950
REDEEMABLE NON-CONTROLLING INTERESTS
Redeemable non-controlling interests
—
6,009
STOCKHOLDERS’ EQUITY
Preferred stock
—
—
Common stock
1,343
1,343
Additional paid-in capital
671,400
682,344
Accumulated deficit
(205,783)
(226,335)
Accumulated other comprehensive (loss) income
(8,850)
29,660
Treasury stock
(11,518)
(11,518)
Total stockholders’ equity
446,592
475,494
Non-controlling interest
150
112
Total equity
446,742
475,606
Total liabilities, redeemable interests and stockholders’ equity
$ 910,071
$ 955,565
POWERFLEET, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
(In thousands)
Year Ended March 31,
2025
2026
Cash flows from operating activities
Net loss
$ (50,987)
$ (20,552)
Adjustments to reconcile net loss to cash (used in) provided by operating activities:
Non-controlling interest
18
608
Inventory reserve
4,480
2,339
Stock-based compensation expense
9,362
7,541
Depreciation and amortization
47,494
60,280
Right-of-use assets, non-cash lease expense
5,007
4,056
Derivative mark-to-market adjustment
(504)
(775)
Bad debts expense
9,418
10,988
Deferred income taxes
(4,872)
(1,737)
Shares issued for transaction bonuses
889
—
Lease termination and modification losses
295
(233)
Other non-cash items
1,061
(2,159)
Changes in operating assets and liabilities:
Accounts receivables
(14,048)
(21,232)
Inventories
5,729
(4,464)
Prepaid expenses and other current assets
5,474
2,201
Deferred costs
(8,437)
(8,545)
Deferred revenue
1,748
1,623
Accounts payable, accrued expenses and other current liabilities
(12,162)
5,228
Lease liabilities
(4,558)
(3,685)
Accrued severance payable, net
1,248
(1,021)
Net cash (used in) provided by operating activities
(3,345)
30,461
Cash flows from investing activities:
Acquisition, net of cash assumed
(137,112)
55
Proceeds from sale of fixed assets
12
140
Capitalized software development costs
(13,782)
(18,532)
Capital expenditures
(20,008)
(21,618)
Repayment of loan advanced to external parties
294
207
Net cash used in investing activities
(170,596)
(39,748)
Cash flows from financing activities:
Repayment of long-term debt
(2,642)
(5,604)
Short-term bank debt, net
19,551
5,716
Purchase of treasury stock upon vesting of restricted stock
(2,836)
—
Payment of preferred stock dividend and redemption of preferred stock
(90,298)
—
Proceeds from private placement, net
66,459
—
Proceeds from long-term debt
125,000
—
Payment of long-term debt costs
(1,410)
—
Proceeds from exercise of stock options, net
1,898
39
Net cash provided by financing activities
115,722
151
Effect of foreign exchange rate changes on cash and cash equivalents
(2,657)
1,166
Net decrease in cash and cash equivalents, and restricted cash
(60,876)
(7,970)
Cash and cash equivalents, and restricted cash at beginning of the period
109,664
48,788
Cash and cash equivalents, and restricted cash at end of the period
$ 48,788
$ 40,818
Reconciliation of cash, cash equivalents, and restricted cash, beginning of the period
Cash and cash equivalents
24,354
44,392
Restricted cash
85,310
4,396
Cash, cash equivalents, and restricted cash, beginning of the period
$ 109,664
$ 48,788
Reconciliation of cash, cash equivalents, and restricted cash, end of the period
Cash and cash equivalents
44,392
36,496
Restricted cash
4,396
4,322
Cash, cash equivalents, and restricted cash, end of the period
$ 48,788
$ 40,818
Supplemental disclosure of cash flow information:
Cash paid for:
Taxes
$ 4,283
$ 7,250
Interest
$ 15,335
$ 24,490
Noncash investing and financing activities:
Common stock issued for transaction bonus
$ 9
$ —
Shares issued in connection with MiX Combination
$ 362,005
$ —
Shares issued in connection with Fleet Complete acquisition
$ 21,343
$ —
Issuance of redeemable non-controlling interest
$ —
$ 8,765
Rebalancing of ownership percentage between parent and subsidiaries
$ —
$ (3,364)
Annex A: Non-GAAP Financial Measures
In order to assist readers of our consolidated financial statements in understanding the operating results that management uses to evaluate the business and for financial planning purposes, we present non-GAAP measures of organic revenue growth, adjusted EBITDA, adjusted EBITDA margin, adjusted net income per share, adjusted EBITDA gross profit margin, adjusted EBITDA products gross profit margin, adjusted EBITDA services gross profit margin, non-GAAP selling, general and administrative expense ratios, adjusted operating expenses, free cash flow, net debt and adjusted net debt, and adjusted net debt to adjusted EBITDA ratio as supplemental measures of our operating performance. We believe they provide useful information to our investors as they eliminate the impact of certain items that we do not consider indicative of our cash operations and ongoing operating performance. In addition, we use them as an integral part of our internal reporting to measure the performance and operating strength of our business.
We believe organic revenue growth, adjusted EBITDA, adjusted EBITDA margin, adjusted net income per share, adjusted EBITDA gross profit margin, adjusted EBITDA products gross profit margin, adjusted EBITDA services gross profit margin, non-GAAP selling, general and administrative expense ratios, adjusted operating expenses, free cash flow, net debt and adjusted net debt, and adjusted net debt to adjusted EBITDA ratio, are relevant and provide useful information frequently used by securities analysts, investors and other interested parties in their evaluation of the operating performance of companies similar to ours and are indicators of the operational strength of our business.
Organic revenue growth represents the year-over-year percentage change in revenue, excluding the impact of acquisitions. We believe organic revenue growth provides insight into the underlying performance of the Company’s existing operations by removing the effects of changes in the scope of consolidation. Adjusted EBITDA is equal to net loss attributable to common stockholders, excluding non-controlling interest, preferred stock dividend, interest expense (net), other expense (net), income tax benefit/expense, depreciation and amortization, stock-based compensation, foreign currency losses, restructuring-related expenses, derivative mark-to-market adjustment, acquisition-related expenses and integration-related expenses. Following a detailed review of relevant SEC guidance on disclosure of non-GAAP financial measures, we refined our definition of adjusted EBITDA by removing recognition of pre-October 1, 2024 contract assets (Fleet Complete). Comparative information has been adjusted to conform with the updated presentation. We believe adjusted EBITDA eliminates the uneven effect of considerable amounts of non-cash depreciation and amortization, stock-based compensation and other items that might otherwise make comparisons of our ongoing business with prior periods more difficult and obscure trends in ongoing operations. We define adjusted EBITDA margin as adjusted EBITDA as a percentage of revenue. Adjusted net income is equal to net loss excluding incremental intangible assets amortization expense as a result of business combinations, stock-based compensation (non-recurring/accelerated cost), foreign currency losses, restructuring-related expenses, derivative mark-to-market adjustment, acquisition-related expenses, integration-related expenses and inventory rationalization and other, net of tax. We define adjusted net income per share as adjusted net income divided by the weighted-average number of shares outstanding during the period. We believe adjusted net income provides additional means of evaluating period-over-period operating performance by eliminating certain non-cash expenses and other items that might otherwise make comparisons of our ongoing business with prior periods more difficult and obscure trends in ongoing operations. We define adjusted EBITDA gross profit as gross profit excluding inventory rationalization and other and depreciation and amortization, and adjusted EBITDA gross profit margin as adjusted EBITDA gross profit as a percentage of revenues. Our adjusted EBITDA gross profit is a measure used by management in evaluating the business’s current operating performance by excluding the impact of prior historical costs of assets that are expensed systematically and allocated over the estimated useful lives of the assets, which may not be indicative of the current operating activity. We define non-GAAP selling, general and administrative expense ratios as selling, general and administrative expenses adjusted for restructuring-related expenses, acquisition-related expenses, integration-related expenses, depreciation and amortization, and stock-based compensation, and expressed as a percentage of total revenues. We define adjusted operating expenses as total operating expenses adjusted for acquisition-related expenses, integration-related expenses, stock-based compensation (non-recurring/accelerated cost) and restructuring-related expenses. We present non-GAAP selling, general and administrative expense ratios and adjusted operating expenses to provide a clearer view of our operating cost structure by excluding items that are not directly tied to ongoing business operations. Free cash flow is equal to net cash provided by operating activities, excluding proceeds from the sale of fixed assets, capitalized software development costs and capital expenditures. We present free cash flow because we believe it provides useful information to investors and others in understanding and evaluating the Company’s cash flows by providing detail of the amount of cash the Company generates or utilizes after accounting for all capital expenditures as well as costs that do not relate to our core business operations. We define adjusted net debt as total debt less cash, cash equivalents, and restricted cash, resulting in net debt less unsettled transaction costs. Adjusted net debt to adjusted EBITDA ratio is calculated as adjusted net debt divided by adjusted EBITDA for the trailing 12-month period. We present adjusted net debt and adjusted net debt to adjusted EBITDA ratio to help investors and others better understand our true leverage position and financial flexibility. Unsettled transaction costs – often related to acquisitions, integrations, or financing activities – can temporarily inflate net debt figures and obscure comparability across periods.
Adjusted EBITDA, adjusted EBITDA margin, adjusted net income per share, adjusted EBITDA gross profit margin, adjusted EBITDA products gross profit margin, adjusted EBITDA services gross profit margin, non-GAAP selling, general and administrative expense ratios, adjusted operating expenses, free cash flow, net debt and adjusted net debt, and adjusted net debt to adjusted EBITDA ratio are not intended to be performance measures that should be regarded as an alternative to, or more meaningful than, financial measures presented in accordance with U.S. GAAP. The way we measure adjusted EBITDA, adjusted EBITDA margin, adjusted net income per share, adjusted EBITDA gross profit margin, adjusted EBITDA products gross profit margin, adjusted EBITDA services gross profit margin, non-GAAP selling, general and administrative expense ratios, adjusted operating expenses, free cash flow, net debt and adjusted net debt, and adjusted net debt to adjusted EBITDA ratio, may not be comparable to similarly titled measures presented by other companies.
A reconciliation of net loss attributable to common stockholders (the most directly comparable financial measure presented in accordance with GAAP) to adjusted EBITDA for the periods shown is presented below (in thousands and unaudited):
Three Months Ended
March 31,
Year Ended
March 31,
2025 (1)
2026
2025 (1)
2026
Net loss attributable to common stockholders
$ (12,439)
$ (2,666)
$ (51,012)
$ (20,552)
Non-controlling interest
1
608
18
608
Preferred stock dividend
—
—
25
—
Interest expense, net
5,560
6,708
19,404
26,746
Other expense, net
—
304
—
129
Income tax (benefit) expense
(304)
4,064
4,517
8,688
Depreciation and amortization
14,452
12,589
47,494
60,280
Stock-based compensation
924
1,603
9,362
7,541
Foreign currency losses
502
80
1,790
3,862
Restructuring-related expenses
6,969
603
10,077
4,923
Derivative mark-to-market adjustment
(29)
1,279
(504)
(775)
Acquisition-related expenses
428
213
21,300
1,689
Integration-related expenses
2,592
1,042
4,851
3,893
Adjusted EBITDA
$ 18,656
$ 26,427
$ 67,322
$ 97,032
Net loss margin
(12.0) %
(2.3) %
(14.1) %
(4.6) %
Adjusted EBITDA margin
18.0 %
23.1 %
18.6 %
21.9 %
Other cash items:
Recognition of pre-October 1, 2024 contract assets (Fleet Complete)
$ 1,768
$ 1,009
$ 3,809
$ 5,035
(1) Following the closing of our acquisition of Fleet Complete, we included an EBITDA adjustment related to the recognition of pre-October 1, 2024, contract assets. This adjustment represented recoveries, through customer billings, of the contract asset recognized at acquisition for hardware delivered by Fleet Complete prior to October 1, 2024. This adjustment was intended to give investors a clearer view of underlying operating performance and cash generation. The goal was to better align adjusted EBITDA with operating cash flows.
Following a detailed review of relevant SEC guidance on disclosure of non-GAAP financial measures, we have stopped including this adjustment in our presentation of adjusted EBITDA.
For the three months and years ended March 31, 2025 and 2026, we reported adjusted EBITDA of $18.7 million, $67.3 million, $26.4 million and $97.0 million, respectively. During the same periods, we also invoiced recoveries of $1.8 million, $3.8 million, $1.0 million and $5.0 million, respectively, which are included in cash flows from operating activities in the condensed consolidated statement of cash flows.
The following table (in thousands, except per share data, and unaudited) reconciles net loss to adjusted net income for the periods shown:
Three Months Ended
March 31,
Year Ended
March 31,
2025
2026
2025
2026
Net loss
$ (12,439)
$ (2,666)
$ (50,987)
$ (20,552)
Incremental intangible assets amortization expense as a result of business combinations
5,201
5,495
14,752
22,816
Stock-based compensation (non-recurring/accelerated cost)
—
—
4,693
—
Foreign currency losses
502
80
1,790
3,862
Restructuring-related expenses
6,969
603
10,077
4,923
Derivative mark-to-market adjustment
(29)
1,279
(504)
(775)
Acquisition-related expenses
428
213
21,300
1,689
Integration-related expenses
2,592
1,042
4,851
3,893
Inventory rationalization and other
—
—
—
415
Income tax effect of adjustments
(430)
(391)
(809)
(4,991)
Adjusted net income
$ 2,794
$ 5,655
$ 5,163
$ 11,280
Weighted-average shares outstanding
132,793
134,153
119,877
133,761
Net loss per share – basic
$ (0.09)
$ (0.02)
$ (0.43)
$ (0.15)
Adjusted net income per share – basic
$ 0.02
$ 0.04
$ 0.04
$ 0.08
The following table (in thousands and unaudited) reconciles gross profit margins to adjusted EBITDA gross profit margins for the periods shown:
Three Months Ended
March 31,
Year Ended
March 31,
2025
2026
2025
2026
Products:
Product revenues
$ 21,866
$ 21,546
$ 85,584
$ 83,975
Cost of products
18,152
15,295
61,961
59,153
Products gross profit
$ 3,714
$ 6,251
$ 23,623
$ 24,822
Inventory rationalization and other
$ 2,570
$ —
$ 3,310
$ —
Adjusted EBITDA products gross profit
$ 6,284
$ 6,251
$ 26,933
$ 24,822
Products gross profit margin
17.0 %
29.0 %
27.6 %
29.6 %
Adjusted EBITDA products gross profit margin
28.7 %
29.0 %
31.5 %
29.6 %
Services:
Services revenues
81,772
92,944
276,931
359,802
Cost of services
30,723
34,531
106,017
138,202
Services gross profit
$ 51,049
$ 58,413
$ 170,914
$ 221,600
Depreciation and amortization
11,773
11,440
37,984
51,982
Adjusted EBITDA services gross profit
$ 62,822
$ 69,853
$ 208,898
$ 273,582
Services gross profit margin
62.4 %
62.8 %
61.7 %
61.6 %
Adjusted EBITDA services gross profit margin
76.8 %
75.2 %
75.4 %
76.0 %
Total:
Total revenues
$ 103,638
$ 114,490
$ 362,515
$ 443,777
Total cost of revenues
48,875
49,826
167,978
197,355
Total gross profit
$ 54,763
$ 64,664
$ 194,537
$ 246,422
Inventory rationalization and other
$ 2,570
$ —
$ 3,310
$ —
Depreciation and amortization
$ 11,773
$ 11,440
$ 37,984
$ 51,982
Adjusted EBITDA gross profit
$ 69,106
$ 76,104
$ 235,831
$ 298,404
Gross profit margin
52.8 %
56.5 %
53.7 %
55.5 %
Adjusted EBITDA gross profit margin
66.7 %
66.5 %
65.1 %
67.2 %
The following table (in thousands and unaudited) reconciles selling, general and administrative (“SG&A”) expenses to non-GAAP SG&A expenses for the periods shown:
Three Months Ended
March 31,
Year Ended
March 31,
2025
2026
2025
2026
Total revenues
$ 103,638
$ 114,490
$ 362,515
$ 443,777
Selling, general and administrative expenses
Selling, general and administrative expenses
56,839
48,903
204,361
208,487
Restructuring-related expenses
(4,499)
(603)
(6,767)
(4,923)
Acquisition-related expenses
(428)
(213)
(21,300)
(1,689)
Integration-related expenses
(2,592)
(1,042)
(4,851)
(3,893)
Depreciation and amortization
(2,401)
(1,149)
(7,979)
(8,298)
Stock-based compensation
(924)
(1,603)
(9,362)
(7,541)
Non-GAAP selling, general and administrative expenses
45,995
44,293
154,102
182,143
Non-GAAP sales and marketing expenses
17,345
19,895
52,869
77,180
Non-GAAP general and administrative expenses
28,750
24,398
101,233
104,963
Non-GAAP selling, general and administrative expenses
$ 46,095
$ 44,293
$ 154,102
$ 182,143
Non-GAAP sales and marketing expenses as a percentage of total revenue
16.7 %
17.4 %
14.6 %
17.4 %
Non-GAAP general and administrative expenses as a percentage of total revenue
27.7 %
21.3 %
27.9 %
23.7 %
Research and development expenses
Research and development incurred
$ 9,082
$ 8,156
$ 28,881
$ 34,771
Research and development capitalized
(4,178)
(3,420)
(12,820)
(16,412)
Research and development expenses
$ 4,904
$ 4,736
$ 16,061
$ 18,359
Research and development incurred as a percentage of total revenues
8.8 %
7.1 %
8.0 %
7.8 %
Research and development expenses as a percentage of total revenues
4.7 %
4.1 %
4.4 %
4.1 %
The following table (in thousands and unaudited) reconciles total operating expenses to adjusted operating expenses for the periods shown:
Three Months Ended
March 31,
Year Ended
March 31,
2025
2026
2025
2026
Total operating expenses
$ 61,743
$ 53,639
$ 220,422
$ 226,846
Adjusted for:
Acquisition-related expenses
428
213
21,300
1,689
Integration-related expenses
2,592
1,042
4,851
3,893
Stock-based compensation (non-recurring/accelerated cost)
—
—
4,693
—
Restructuring-related expenses
4,499
603
6,767
4,923
7,519
1,858
37,611
10,505
Adjusted operating expenses
$ 54,224
$ 51,781
$ 182,811
$ 216,341
The following table (in thousands and unaudited) reconciles net cash provided by operating activities to free cash flow for the periods shown:
Three Months Ended
June 30,
2025
September 30,
2025
December 31,
2025
March 31,
2026
Net cash provided by operating activities
$ 4,721
$ 5,522
$ 10,208
$ 10,010
Plus: Proceeds from sale of fixed assets
16
2
39
83
Less: Capitalized software development costs
(3,724)
(7,767)
(2,608)
(4,433)
Less: Capital expenditures
(8,114)
(4,338)
(5,265)
(3,901)
Free cash flow
$ (7,101)
$ (6,581)
$ 2,374
$ 1,759
The following table (in thousands and unaudited) reconciles total debt to adjusted net debt for the periods shown:
March 31,
2025
March 31,
2026
Total debt
$ 273,792
$ 280,024
Less: Cash, cash equivalents, and restricted cash
(48,788)
(40,818)
Net debt
225,004
239,206
Unsettled transaction costs
3,551
—
Adjusted net debt
$ 228,555
$ 239,206
12-month trailing adjusted EBITDA
$ 67,322
$ 97,032
Adjusted net debt to adjusted EBITDA ratio
3.39
2.47
View original content to download multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/powerfleet-reports-results-for-fourth-quarter-and-full-year-fiscal-2026-302799808.html
SOURCE Powerfleet
You may like
Technology
Toboggan Labs Joins Mila’s Industry Partner Network to Strengthen Healthcare AI Capabilities
Published
15 minutes agoon
June 15, 2026By
MONTREAL, June 15, 2026 /CNW/ — Toboggan Labs, a technology consultancy specializing in AI, data science, and engineering for healthcare and regulated industries, and Mila – Quebec Artificial Intelligence Institute announced a new partnership.
The collaboration connects Toboggan Labs to the world’s largest academic AI research centre specialized in deep learning, strengthening the firm’s ability to help healthcare and life sciences organizations translate cutting-edge research into production systems. The collaboration will also provide Toboggan with access to professional development opportunities and high-level knowledge-sharing activities within a globally recognized innovation ecosystem.
“The AI landscape is shifting faster than any single organization can track,” said Florencia Herra-Vega, CEO of Toboggan Labs. “For leadership teams making technology decisions, separating signal from noise requires deep expertise and strong partnerships across industry and academia. Our Mila partnership positions us to stay close to the research frontier while delivering production-ready systems.”
“Healthcare is one of the most consequential domains for AI adoption, and delivering on its promise demands rigorous science, domain expertise, and a commitment to responsible deployment. Toboggan Labs shares those values, and we look forward to the knowledge exchange this partnership will enable across our research community,” said Stéphane Létourneau, Executive Vice-President of Mila.
About Toboggan Labs
Toboggan Labs is a Montreal-based technology consultancy specializing in AI, data science, and engineering for healthcare and regulated industries. The firm helps organizations bridge the gap between AI research and production systems. They work with healthcare and life sciences organizations to develop long-term technology strategy while driving immediate results, with engagements spanning clinical intelligence platforms, AI-powered documentation systems, and strategic advisory.
For more information, visit tobogganlabs.com.
About Mila – Quebec Artificial Intelligence Institute
Founded by Professor Yoshua Bengio, Mila – Quebec Artificial Intelligence Institute is the world’s largest academic AI research centre specialized in deep learning, home to a community of over 1,500 members. Based in Montreal, Mila was created out of a unique partnership between Université de Montréal and McGill University, dedicated to advancing scientific breakthroughs that drive innovation and ensure AI benefits everyone. A non-profit organization, Mila is strongly supported by the Government of Canada through the Pan-Canadian AI Strategy and by the Government of Quebec. Internationally recognized for its influential research, global innovation partnerships, and leadership in multilateral efforts on responsible AI, Mila continues to shape the future of AI worldwide. For more information, visit mila.quebec.
View original content to download multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/toboggan-labs-joins-milas-industry-partner-network-to-strengthen-healthcare-ai-capabilities-302798481.html
SOURCE Toboggan Labs
Technology
New Medicaid Rules Threaten to Deepen the Rural Healthcare Crisis
Published
15 minutes agoon
June 15, 2026By
With 41.2% of rural hospitals already operating in the red and 417 facilities vulnerable to closure, new work requirements and more frequent eligibility checks risk pushing eligible patients off coverage for paperwork reasons rather than true ineligibility.
WASHINGTON, June 15, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — New Medicaid work requirements and more frequent eligibility checks risk creating an unintended rural healthcare access problem by pushing eligible patients off coverage for paperwork reasons rather than true ineligibility, AmeriTrust Solutions warns. That threat is landing at a time when rural providers are already under severe pressure: more than 40% of rural hospitals are operating at a loss, 417 are vulnerable to closure, and essential services such as obstetrics, chemotherapy, and general surgery are disappearing from rural communities.
The deeper risk is administrative churn. The Commonwealth Fund reports one in 10 Medicaid enrollees loses and regains coverage within 12 months, and approximately 70% of disenrollments since unwinding have been procedural. The same analysis warns that requiring adults in Medicaid expansion populations to renew eligibility every six months instead of annually would increase churn. For rural providers, that instability can quickly become a revenue problem: in the 10 states that have not adopted Medicaid expansion, 52.2% of rural hospitals are already operating in the red.
“When eligible patients lose Medicaid because the process gets harder, the consequence is not just administrative, it is financial and clinical,” said Peter Justen, Founder and CEO of AmeriTrust Solutions. “Rural hospitals feel that loss in delayed reimbursement, uncompensated care, and growing pressure on already fragile services. The better answer is to reduce the friction before coverage is lost and the damage moves downstream.”
Rural Systems Are Already at the Edge
For rural providers, Medicaid is part of an infrastructure that helps keep hospitals and other safety-net providers open. The pressure is especially acute for Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHC), which are required to provide care regardless of insurance enrollment or ability to pay. That means every intake failure, missed renewal, or coverage lapse can quickly translate into uncompensated care for facilities already operating on thin margins. Chartis found that more than 200 rural hospitals have closed or converted since 2010, while service-line losses continue to spread across the country. Between 2011 and 2024, 331 rural hospitals stopped offering obstetric services, and between 2014 and 2024, 448 rural hospitals stopped offering chemotherapy. In many communities, the more immediate warning sign is the disappearance of essential services.
KFF reports that 41 states, including Washington, D.C., have adopted Medicaid expansion, while 10 states have not. Those non-expansion states overlap with some of the most financially exposed rural hospital markets in the country. In those areas, procedural disenrollments can quickly shift patients from reimbursed coverage into self-pay or charity care, even though provider still delivers the service.
Administrative Churn Is the Unintended Risk
Churn does not just interrupt insurance coverage. It disrupts access to preventive services, medications and continuous care for chronic illness while increasing hospitalizations and emergency room visits. It also creates measurable cost for states: disenrolling and reenrolling one person within a year is estimated to cost between $400 and $600. Researchers estimate that 12-month continuous eligibility for adults would reduce churn by 30%, resulting in 267,000 fewer uninsured adults each month and approximately $87 million in reduced state administrative costs.
AmeriTrust Solutions says the churn problem is often driven by specific operational bottlenecks rather than a single policy failure. Among the most common are low ex parte automation, lagging application-side automation, stale contact information that causes renewal notices to go to old addresses, late form returns, and manual document handling that requires scanning and worker rekeying.
The instability is already showing up in enrollment data. Georgetown University’s Center for Children and Families reported that, as of October 2025, 36.4 million children were enrolled in Medicaid and Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP), one million fewer than at the beginning of 2025. Over that period, 47 states plus the District of Columbia saw child enrollment declines.
At the provider level, that often shows up in simple but costly ways: “Patients arrive without active coverage even though they could have been enrolled on-site, presumptive eligibility opportunities are missed , or renewal lapses are only discovered after a billable encounter is denied”, said Justen. “Each of those failures can turn a reimbursable visit into a write-off.”
The Upstream Fix
AmeriTrust Solutions strengthens how Medicaid applications begin, using verified third-party data prefill and intake optimization to reduce administrative burden before applications enter existing systems, helping agencies receive cleaner, more complete submissions the first time and helping providers initiate coverage earlier. The process can reduce application complexity by roughly 90%, from more than 200 questions to approximately 20 to 25, supporting faster downstream decision-making.
“Too much of the system still responds after coverage is lost or after payment is delayed,” Justen said. “The better approach is to reduce the intake errors and documentation gaps that create that exposure in the first place. If you improve the application at intake, you improve everything downstream.”
About AmeriTrust Solutions
AmeriTrust Solutions is a Medicaid eligibility modernization company focused on improving enrollment accuracy at the point of intake. Built from lived experience navigating Medicaid bureaucracy and refined alongside rural hospitals and state eligibility operators, AmeriTrust Solutions integrates consent-based data verification into existing state systems without requiring full infrastructure replacement. By reducing documentation gaps and administrative friction, AmeriTrust Solutions helps protect public funds, stabilize hospital revenue cycles, and strengthen compliance defensibility under federal oversight. Visit https://ameritrustsolutions.com/.
Sources
Associated Press. (2026, April 28). Medicaid work requirement is about to kick in Nebraska. apnews.com/article/medicaid-work-requirements-nebraska-94555d7d5e739789c46b52f52f737f1bChartis Center for Rural Health. (2026, February 10). 2026 rural health state of the state. Chartis. chartis.com/insights/2026-rural-health-state-stateKFF. (2026, May 6). Status of state Medicaid expansion decisions. kff.org/medicaid/status-of-state-medicaid-expansion-decisions/Musumeci, M., Murphy, C., Leiser, E., Silverman, H., & Azimpoor, K. (2025, June 11). Reducing Medicaid churn: Policies to promote stable health coverage and access to care. The Commonwealth Fund. commonwealthfund.org/publications/issue-briefs/2025/jun/reducing-medicaid-churn-policies-promote-stable-health-coverageOsorio, A., Yafimenka, Y., Little, J., & Alker, J. (2026, February 26). New state-by-state Medicaid and CHIP tracker shows declining enrollment as H.R. 1 cuts loom. Center for Children and Families. ccf.georgetown.edu/2026/02/26/new-state-by-state-medicaid-and-chip-tracker-shows-declining-enrollment-as-h-r-1-cuts-loom/
Media Inquiries:
Karla Jo Helms
JOTO PR
727-777-4629
Jotopr.com
View original content to download multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/new-medicaid-rules-threaten-to-deepen-the-rural-healthcare-crisis-302800067.html
SOURCE AmeriTrust Solutions
Technology
Robert Half survey: Nearly half of U.S. professionals plan to look for a new job in the second half of 2026
Published
15 minutes agoon
June 15, 2026By
Job search plans are on the rise as professionals seek better benefits, career growth opportunities and flexibility46% say AI-generated application materials have intensified competition and made it harder to stand out
MENLO PARK, Calif., June 15, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — New research from talent solutions and business consulting firm Robert Half shows that professionals are reassessing their careers, and many are preparing to make a move in the second half of 2026. A survey of more than 2,000 U.S. professionals found that 46% plan to look for a new job in the next 6 months, up from 38% in the first half of 2026 and 27% one year ago.
Gen Z workers (55%), as well as those who work in healthcare (56%) and technology (49%), are the most likely to explore new opportunities.
What’s motivating workers to change jobs?
After several years of market uncertainty and cautious job search activity, professionals are increasingly motivated to pursue new opportunities for a few key reasons:
Better benefits and perks (47%)Career advancement opportunities (43%)Remote work options (39%)Higher salary (35%)Feeling burned out (26%)
“For the past few years, many workers have taken a cautious approach to career moves, often prioritizing stability amid economic and workplace uncertainty,” said Dawn Fay, operational president of Robert Half. “Today, we’re seeing growing confidence among professionals as they re-engage with the job market and actively pursue opportunities that offer greater career growth, flexibility and alignment with their long-term aspirations.”
How has AI complicated the job search?
While professionals are exploring new opportunities, many anticipate challenges ahead, particularly as AI continues to reshape the job search. Among those looking for a new role:
46% say AI-generated applications have intensified competition for open roles.40% are concerned about keeping their skills current as AI evolves.
“AI has fundamentally changed the job search,” Fay added. “It’s increasingly difficult to stand out as more candidates use AI-generated materials that can make applications appear polished—but sometimes less accurate or distinctive. It’s important for job seekers to have a plan and continue to evolve their skills to align with current workplace expectations.”
Robert Half’s latest Job Search Strategies Guide offers practical advice aligned with these insights, helping early career professionals apply this guidance as they enter today’s workforce.
FAQ:
Why are more professionals planning to look for a new job?
Workers are reassessing their long-term career goals, compensation, flexibility and growth opportunities. Professionals now appear more willing to explore new roles that better align with their priorities.
How has AI changed the job search process?
AI has made applying for jobs easier, but it has also increased competition and application volume. Hiring managers are reviewing more homogenous applications, making it increasingly important for candidates to demonstrate authentic technical skills, communication abilities and measurable experience.
What can job seekers do to stand out in today’s market?
Candidates should focus on clearly communicating measurable accomplishments, showcasing adaptability, and highlighting both technical and human skills. Tailoring resumes thoughtfully rather than relying on AI can also help candidates differentiate themselves.
Should professionals work with a recruiter during their job search?
Working with a specialized staffing firm can help candidates better understand hiring trends, identify opportunities that align with their skills and prepare more effectively for interviews. Recruiting experts can also provide insight into employer expectations, compensation trends and in-demand skills across industries.
About the Research
The research is gathered from a survey developed by Robert Half and conducted by an independent research firm in April 2026. The survey includes responses from more than 2,000 employed workers across the United States.
About Robert Half
Robert Half (NYSE: RHI) is the world’s first and largest specialized talent solutions and business consulting firm, connecting highly skilled job seekers with rewarding opportunities at great companies. We offer contract talent and permanent placement solutions in the fields of finance and accounting, technology, marketing and creative, legal, administrative and customer support, healthcare support, and human resources.
Robert Half is the parent company of Protiviti®, a global consulting firm that delivers internal audit, risk, business and technology consulting solutions. In the past 12 months, Robert Half, including Protiviti, has been named one of the Fortune® Most Admired Companies™ and 100 Best Companies to Work For. Explore talent solutions, research and insights at roberthalf.com.
View original content to download multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/robert-half-survey-nearly-half-of-us-professionals-plan-to-look-for-a-new-job-in-the-second-half-of-2026-302799405.html
SOURCE Robert Half
Toboggan Labs Joins Mila’s Industry Partner Network to Strengthen Healthcare AI Capabilities
New Medicaid Rules Threaten to Deepen the Rural Healthcare Crisis
Robert Half survey: Nearly half of U.S. professionals plan to look for a new job in the second half of 2026
Send Rakhi to UK swiftly with UK Gifts Portal
Whiteboard Series with NEAR | Ep: 45 Joel Thorstensson from ceramic.network
New Gooseneck Omni Antennas Offer Enhanced Signals in a Durable Package
Why You Should Build on #NEAR – Co-founder Illia Polosukhin at CV Labs
Whiteboard Series with NEAR | Ep: 45 Joel Thorstensson from ceramic.network
NEAR End of Year Town Hall 2021: The Open Web World, MetaBUILD 2 Hackathon and 2021 recap
Trending
-
Coin Market5 days ago
Anchorage backs Treasury’s GENIUS AML rules, seeks secondary-market sanctions clarity
-
Technology5 days agoTenjumps Sponsors PGA TOUR Professional Bud Cauley Following Strong Memorial Tournament Finish
-
Technology4 days agoKrya Global Solutions expands U.S. presence to strengthen Background Screening Services
-
Near Videos5 days agoHow to Trade Perps on near.com | NEAR Intents + Hyperliquid |
-
Technology5 days agoACC Co-Hosts 2026 Energy Imperatives Summit
-
Technology4 days agoInsta360 Launches Luna Ultra: Leica Co-Engineered Gimbal Camera Built for Next-Generation Mobile Filmmaking
-
Coin Market5 days ago
Bitcoin miner margins fall to record low: Will BTC’s $60K floor hold?
-
Technology5 days agobrightplace Brings Financial Intelligence to Apartment Search
