Motley Fool Money - Interview with Axon President Josh Isner
Episode Date: December 14, 2025Axon Enterprise produces the Taser, body cameras, and cloud-based software services. And the law enforcement technology company has produced big returns for investors. Motley Fool analyst Jason Moser ...recently talked with Axon President Josh Isner about the recent quarter, recent acquisitions, and the future of Axon. Host: Jason Moser Guest: Josh Isner Producer: Bart Shannon, Mac Greer Advertisements are sponsored content and provided for informational purposes only. The Motley Fool and its affiliates (collectively, "TMF") do not endorse, recommend, or verify the accuracy or completeness of the statements made within advertisements. TMF is not involved in the offer, sale, or solicitation of any securities advertised herein and makes no representations regarding the suitability, or risks associated with any investment opportunity presented. Investors should conduct their own due diligence and consult with legal, tax, and financial advisors before making any investment decisions. TMF assumes no responsibility for any losses or damages arising from this advertisement. We’re committed to transparency: All personal opinions in advertisements from Fools are their own. The product advertised in this episode was loaned to TMF and was returned after a test period or the product advertised in this episode was purchased by TMF. Advertiser has paid for the sponsorship of this episode Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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I think whenever we're talking about ways to incapacitate people more safely, that's universally
a positive.
That was Axon President Josh Isner.
I'm Motleyful producer, MacGroarer.
Now, Axon is best known for its tasers and body cameras.
But Axon is also seeing big success with its software services.
Motleyful analyst Jason Moser recently sat down with Isner to talk about the business of Axon,
including Axon's latest quarter, some recent deals, and some big opportunities ahead.
Hey, folks, I'm Jason Moser, senior analyst here at the Motley Fool, and I'm excited to talk with the president of Axon Enterprise.
Josh Isner, Josh, thanks so much for spending some time with us today.
Been to be back, Jason. Thanks a lot for having me today.
Absolutely, absolutely. So let's just kick off with looking back at this most recent quarter, right?
There are a lot of great stuff you reported and a lot of interesting stuff going to.
on here, you've got these recent acquisitions of prepared and carbine. And then this idea of
Axon 9-1-1, you know, when the deals were first announced, I was like, hmm, I wonder what
they've got up their sleeve. And then after the call and after reading the shareholder letter,
I was like, oh, okay, I get it. So can you talk about why these deals make sense? And ultimately,
what the strategy for Axon-9-1-1 is? Sure, sure. Well, taking a step back, I think, you know,
our mission is to protect life. And one of the ways, one of the opportunities we've identified to do that
is in the 911 space. And so usually what happens is a call comes in and then it takes a full two minutes
plus for help to get on the way. So as we look at that, that has real downstream effects on our
products, everything from sending a drone there to having an officer on the way with our camera
technology and our less lethal tools and so forth. And so as we look at this, we think this has been
historically a pretty underserved market by technology, such that with some new, smaller, more
nimble kind of AI offerings, we feel like we can deliver a better product that condenses that two
minutes to a matter of seconds. And when you think about it, someone call a 911, all the metadata
is already moving from their location to the call center. So you know where the person is.
You can hear what they're saying.
And really, we think that should be enough to get help on the way.
But the way it works a lot of times in public safety right now is that call taker is taking notes,
is trying to understand what's happening.
Then they pass over the information to a dispatcher.
The dispatcher then has to get in touch with the officer over the radio to get the officer
out to the scene.
And that's just a long, cumbersome process.
And we think as we move further and further downrange in technology and AI, this is something
that metadata comes in. Paul is being analyzed by AI. It's already looking at where the officers are in the
field and can already route the officers there pretty seamlessly. And while all that's happened,
it can be triggering a drone flight so you have eyes on the scene faster. We think this is just a very
synergistic addition to our workflow, not only where we can save lives, but we can make our customers
a lot more efficient with more modern tools. Yeah, I think what I was reading through the letter,
and I saw sort of the graphic that you all had drawn out sort of the timeline, the process, right?
And there are a lot of participants in that value chain, so to speak.
And I think Rick even made mention of this on the call.
It's like that old game of telephone where there are just so many opportunities for miscommunication.
And I think that to me was what really stood out as like, wow, this really could be something that just crystallizes everything and makes it far more efficient.
So I'm excited.
You feel like that's going to be something that I think really continues on with your AI vision there of the company.
And, you know, in the call, you mentioned that the AI era plan continues to be the fastest booked axon software product to date.
You said you're on pace for AI bookings to contribute over 10% of U.S. state and local bookings for this year.
What is driving that? Is there a particular feature in that AI era plan or is it just generally the idea that customers are all in with you and the tangible deliverables that you're offering in regard to AI?
Yeah, I think it's a few different things.
I think there's some trust with our customers for sure.
We've been the company that brought the cloud to public safety, brought wearables to public safety,
conducted electrical weapons when it was either using pepper spray or a gun.
And so we are a brand that our customers trust in terms of disruptive technologies and making sure they fit the use case and they work well.
So I think that's kind of the foundation of how we're able to sell and grow sales.
But really beyond that, there's a few products that have become very popular, draft one being one of them.
which essentially listens to the audio recording of a body cam video and then writes the first draft
of the police report for the officer and gets the person about 80 to 90 percent there.
So you're editing, you're filling in the blanks, but you're not spending literally half your time
on the job writing reports anymore.
When you can give all our customers that time back, they don't necessarily need to hire
as many people at the police force.
So, you know, all these vacancies that they have right now kind of go away because your officers
are doing what they do best and fighting crime, you know, in their communities. And so, um,
we're very, very excited about the AI space and the AI era plan in general. I think one of the
things that really plays to our strengths here in the market is this is a market that's,
just like we're saying about 911, it's traditionally underserved by technology. So there are a
lot of these really outdated, lengthy, people intensive workflows. And when we look at AI, the place
where, you know, people fall in love with self-driving cars or drones or, you know, things that are
very exciting into the future. But today, the place where you can really get a lot of value out of
AI, in my opinion, is much more on the taped administrative human activities and hand them over
to AI to complete for you. And, you know, there's a lot of those in public safety, given that we've
built a lot of trust with our customers and we've been able to delight them with a few of our early
AI products. I think that's voted very well for what the future looks like in terms of our
AI airplane. Yeah, I think that makes a lot of sense. It was interesting to me. I saw in regard to
draft one, and I guess I didn't think about this initially, but then it made perfect sense.
You got just such positive feedback from actually inside the courtroom, right? Like actually
in a court of law, like attorneys, the litigation process, like that was actually cleared.
They said, this is really good. It's working. Yeah. It's more than just the speed and the efficiency.
it's also the quality of these reports go way up.
You know, instead of just writing off a memory or even reviewing the body cam transcript
and just kind of selectively putting things in there, the AI is analyzing the whole transcript
and the quality and consistency of those reports is getting better and better and better.
It's essentially like having a professional writer looking over your shoulder,
writing your reports for you.
And, you know, the downstream effects, like you said, are prosecuting attorneys are thrilled
with the quality of the reports.
lays out a better picture of what happened for a jury or a judge.
So definitely some positive downstream effects there.
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Well, we have a question from one of our members.
I want to make sure I get this in.
Kieran Flynn asked me to ask you,
if Axon sees similar opportunities,
in the areas of surveillance and live security monitoring solutions.
And Kieran was referring to a specific company called Zedcore.
But ultimately, the question is, generally speaking, surveillance and live security monitoring.
Is that something that's on your company's radar today?
Or is that an opportunity that you're paying attention to at all?
Yeah, it's on our radar.
I think the first thing that we want to talk about,
whenever we talked about the concept of taking video in public or surveillance,
is that we take privacy and the practices around aggregating video very, very seriously.
And, you know, this is a company where we're generally not first to market on some of these products
because we'd rather be right. We'd rather have community buy-in. We have a group called our
Ethics and Equity Advisory Coalition, our EAC, that looks at all our products and reviews them
to make sure that we're doing things the right way. And these models are rid of bias and all of the
things that can kind of be gotchas along the way. So, you know, when we come out with these
products, we feel like they're very well thought out and they're, they serve both sides.
They serve public safety community and they also serve the actual community where this technology
is starting to become more and more present. For us, that product is called Fusis. And what it does
is it combines all of the video cameras that you might have between private enterprises like a 7-Eleven
on a corner and city-owned cameras. And in a moment of crisis,
an operator, whether if it's a convenience store, they can tap in the police to their feed to see what's
happening or if it's a city-owned camera, of course, the police can just get access to that. And we are
working on some new technologies around recognizing certain crimes to alert somebody watching to say,
hey, you should check out this feed over here and make sure this is something that is not presenting
a risk to safety. And so we are building those products out, but we're doing it in a thoughtful way
that at the end of the day will hopefully promote a feeling of safety and buy-in from everybody along, you know, the list of stakeholders.
So that's really important to us.
Absolutely. Well, you mentioned enterprise. I think that's a great lead in to the next question here, because over the last several quarters, you've identified a very significant opportunity in the enterprise market, right?
I mean, you're going well beyond just public safety and law enforcement. And so I think when we think about the enterprise opportunity, what are the specific?
products, and I know you've got some stuff launching here in the beginning of 2026, so I'm going to let you talk about that a little bit. But what are the products and services that you think will be able to drive the growth in this new vertical? Sure thing. You know, when you ask retail workers, for example, about their experiences at work right now, theft is on the rise and workplace abuse is on the rise. Customers are becoming more, more abusive verbally and physically to retail associates. And so video, just like we've seen in public safety,
can be a deterrent to activity like that, to document theft so it can be prosecuted,
or to hold both people accountable on both sides of the camera to make sure that things aren't
escalating and getting out of control.
So we believe that between some of our fixed camera products, like I mentioned,
FUSIS, but also our new ABW mini body camera that's specifically built for use cases like
retail, we believe those will present tremendous value, will drive workplace abuse down,
will drive theft down in the industry right now across retail.
Theft is up like two or three percent across the market,
which might not sound like a big number to a consumer,
but that represents billions of dollars in inventory across the industry.
And so this is really something that retailers are looking a lot at and saying,
hey, you know, if we can bring theft down even incrementally from that,
that's real savings for us.
And these products present a valuable ROI.
And so we're very bullish about this space.
We think there's a lot of parallels between some of the things we've seen in public safety
and how they can translate to enterprise.
And we're very excited about what that's going to look like for the years to come.
And I suspect that hardware all then really gets to just ride along with that just tremendous
platform you have in Evidence.com, right?
I mean, you can utilize that Evidence.com platform to then manage all of that video content
to keep things on the up and up, so to speak.
Absolutely true.
Yeah. And we see that a lot with early adopters of our technology. At first, it's all about the hardware. Hey, I want my camera to look like this and I want us to do this, this, and this. But over time, users start to understand the hardware is great and we're very proud of what we build and it's high quality and market leading. But the real value it unlocks in our solution is all the software and AI workflows. And the relationship between hardware and software in our products is really where the value lies. And so,
We're very excited to get hardware in the hands of some of these customers so that we can unlock a lot of value for them on the software side.
I think that makes a lot of sense.
I wanted to ask you about the less than lethal space.
This is something that is, I think, started to come up more and more over the last couple of years.
I've seen all these little startups, these companies kind of getting into the space.
I mean, one that stands out to me, just I hear the advertisements a lot for Burnah, you know, not conducted energy weapons, but like guns, but they're not guns.
and they shoot like red pepper pellets or whatever it is.
But, you know, they're less than lethal ways for folks to protect themselves at the
individual level.
We do see certainly law enforcement sort of dipping a toe in that water as well.
What's your take on this less than lethal space?
Is that competition for you?
Or does that represent potential opportunity for Axon either to develop something like that
or potentially as another tuck-in acquisition?
Yeah, sure.
I think the most important thing is it represents progress, right?
Like, and this isn't a statement about guns.
We have people who are rabid gun owners that acts on, and we have people that have never
owned guns.
It's not political thing.
It's more like, hey, I think everyone would acknowledge, if you can accomplish the same
outcome without having to blow a hole in somebody, that's better for everyone.
Someone, you know, doesn't die as a result.
And the person who pulled the trigger doesn't live with that for the rest of their life.
And so I think whenever we're talking about ways to incapacitate people more safely,
that's universally a positive.
And so we're excited to see more companies in the personal protection space offering alternatives.
Certainly, we're excited about our consumer business and some of the products we offer there.
But, you know, our products have a special kind of relationship to public safety instances just because there are a lot of times where without a taser, a police officer would have to take somebody's life.
And so that's really our first focus always is what can we deliver to our public safety customers that gives them the
option or opportunity to safely use something else as an alternative to a firearm. And there are
going to be times in public safety where that's not possible. But there are definitely times where it is
and we try to mitigate as many of those as we can and certainly welcome more and more options for
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If I hear one criticism regarding Axon, the investment, right?
I mean, talking about our members, you know, investors, shareholders like myself.
The only ever criticism I really ever hear is just in regard to stock-based compensation.
You know, companies use it.
It's not unique, right?
lever that Axon uses today to attract and retain talent. And I think that's the key point there is to
remember it's attracting and retaining talent. I mean, it's around 20% of revenue today, right? And
that's not unheard of. I mean, I get it. You're a small company still really kindly and think about it.
I mean, from a revenue perspective, at least. And I mean, attracting that talent, retaining that
talent is important. I wonder, though, is there a longer term goal for that number to ultimately
come down as the company scales up? You know, I think we,
look at it more holistically in terms of dilution as a whole, not buckets between stock-based
comp and other uses of stock, but more so we want to keep annual dilution under 3%. And like you said,
ever since we started to align our company on stock-based outcomes, and we have this widespread
performance plan across AXon where everybody from Rick, our founder, all the way down to
folks on the manufacturing lines, they can opt into this plan. And it is a high-risk, high-reward
plan, but it incentivizes market cap growth, revenue, and EBITDA growth. And so these are the things that
ultimately, if we get everyone aligned on those principles, those are things that undoubtedly benefit
our shareholders more than they cost them. And when you look at the performance of our stock over the
last 10 years, we think a big part of that has been everybody on the same page, everybody moving
toward the same goals. And when you look at every great sports team in history, one of the things that
all of them have is continuity.
Their best players come back every year.
I'm a big Patriots fan.
We had 20 years of Tom Brady that he left and it wasn't as good.
And now hopefully we got our next version of Tom and Drake May and keep the Drake on the team
for the long term is what's going to be the thing that unlocks their success.
And we look at our company like that too.
For our best players to want to be here for not five years, but for 10 or 15 or 20 plus
years, we've got to make things interesting to them and treat them like,
co-founders in the company where they feel like they really have skin in the game that aligns
with our success. And I think it served us really well. Ultimately, the combination of having
financial goals, but a joint understanding amongst our whole team that it's really our focus
on the customer and solving the problems for the customer and aligning toward our mission.
Those are the ways that we produce better EBITDA, better revenue or, you know, a higher valuation
for our shareholders. And so we've got a really magical thing going in stock-based,
comp is a part of it. And I know it's a little atypical, but our company's growth is atypical, too.
And we believe it's the big part of it. A couple more things for I let you go here real quick.
You know, we have a rule breaker database here at the molecule where we score thousands of
companies based on David Gardner's rule breaker traits, right? And you'll be happy to know that
Axon actually gets a super score in this database of 99 out of 100. And that tells us that
Axon is a company that will continue to disrupt and deliver exceptional growth. So my question for you is,
what is the next great growth frontier for Axon? You know, it's funny, Jason, that we talk about
this a lot internally. And it's not just one. Like, we're big on, like, we've made a lot of bets in a
lot of places. And we're bullish on a lot of those bets. And it really comes down to a very simple
framework. We want to be good at two things at once. We want to be good at selling existing products to
new customers. So that's where we talked about markets like enterprise or our international
customers where we've already built products that have good product market fit. And it's about
delivering those products to new customers and new buyers. Then on the other side of that coin,
we have selling new products to our existing customers. So there it's our core US public
safety ecosystem. And, you know, we're like draft one that we talked about is a good example
of that. Prepared and Carbine, our Axon 911, that's a good example of that. And
And if we do those two things well, it's very resilient because there are some years where,
hey, maybe this market's down a little bit, but these other two or three markets have really
scaled or this product line didn't work out exactly the way we thought, but we launched four or
five products across our markets last year.
And these other ones are doing great.
And so we're big on making a lot of bets, making sure that we can support them from a scale
perspective, from a focus perspective, and then really running hard at them.
And I think that mindset has led to a lot of exciting growth.
I think we've grown, I want to say, 25% plus for seven years in a row now.
And the last few, it's been 30%.
And so we continue to feel really, really good about where the business is headed.
And I think it comes down a lot to just that simple framework.
Okay, last question before I let you go.
And I have a feeling I know you're going to answer this, but I've got to try.
We talked about this several quarters back.
I know last year you talked about this massive logistics provider that you signed on.
I think you said it was the largest deal ever in company history, and it was on the enterprise side.
Did you ever reveal actually the name of that customer?
Who was that logistics provider?
Great question, Jason.
I appreciate it.
We are still not quite ready to reveal.
We want to get to the point where the entire installation is done and up and running, and we're still a few months out from that.
This customer, for example, has 300,000 video streams across the world that we're integrating into FUSIS.
So you can imagine the type of work and the type of like physical, like we got to go to all these geographies and get all this up and running. And it's a pretty big undertaking. And so one of these days we'll come out with a little more detail on that one. But very, very excited about that. And throughout this year, we've picked up some large logos in the enterprise space as well, both on body cameras and on fuses. And, you know, I've said a few times that I think we will have done something really wrong if enterprise doesn't eventually become the biggest.
part of our business just as a function of how many users are out there in the enterprise space
relative to public safety. And so it's a space we're really excited about. We're kind of going
brick by brick through and pull one foot in front of the other. And good things continue to
happen there. So we're very excited about that. Well, I absolutely respect that. And you know,
I had to try. But we'll leave it there. Josh Isner, the president of Acts on Enterprise.
Josh, thanks so much for taking the time and look forward to catching it up again real soon.
Always great to see you, Jason. And I'm sure we'll
out soon. Thanks a lot. As always, people in the program may have interest in the stocks they
talk about, and the Motley Fool may have formal recommendations for or against. So don't buy
ourselves stocks based solely on what you hear. All personal finance content follows Motley Fool
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and provided for informational purposes only. To see our full advertising disclosure,
please check out our show notes. For the Motley Full Money team, I'm Matt Greer. Thanks for listening,
and we will see you tomorrow.
