Quarterlytics / Healthcare / Medical - Healthcare Information Services / Health Catalyst, Inc.

Health Catalyst, Inc.

hcat · NASDAQ Healthcare
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Ticker hcat
Exchange NASDAQ
Sector Healthcare
Industry Medical - Healthcare Information Services
Employees 1500
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FY2020 Annual Report · Health Catalyst, Inc.
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UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
_______________

Form 10-K
_______________

(Mark One)

☒   ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

Or

For the fiscal year ended December 31, 2020

☐   TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

For the transition period from _____ to _____

Commission File Number: 001-38993

HEALTH CATALYST, INC.

(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)
_______________

Delaware
(State or other jurisdiction of
incorporation or organization)

45-3337483

(I.R.S. Employer
Identification Number)

10897 South River Front Parkway #300
South Jordan, UT 84095
(801) 708-6800
(Address, including zip code, and telephone number, including area code, of registrant’s principal executive offices)
_______________

Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:

Title of each class

Common Stock, par value $0.001 per share

Trading Symbol(s)

HCAT

Name of exchange on which registered

The Nasdaq Global Select Market

Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(g) of the Act: None

Indicate by check mark if the Registrant is a well-known seasoned issuer, as defined in Rule 405 of the Securities Act. Yes ☒ No ☐

Indicate by check mark if the Registrant is not required to be file reports pursuant to Section 13 or Section 15(d) of the Act. Yes ☐ No ☒

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding
12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for the past 90 days. Yes ☒
No ☐

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant has submitted electronically every Interactive Data File required to be submitted pursuant to Rule 405 of Regulation S-T
(§232.405 of this chapter) during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to submit such files). Yes ☒ No ☐

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, a non-accelerated filer, a smaller reporting company, or an emerging growth
company. See the definitions of “large accelerated filer,” “accelerated filer,” “smaller reporting company” and “emerging growth company” in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange
Act.

Large accelerated filer

Non-accelerated Filer

☒ Accelerated Filer
☐ Smaller reporting company

☐ Emerging growth company
☐

☐

If  an  emerging  growth  company,  indicate  by  check  mark  if  the  registrant  has  elected  not  to  use  the  extended  transition  period  for  complying  with  any  new  or  revised
financial accounting standards provided pursuant to Section 13(a) of the Exchange Act. ☐

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant has filed a report on and attestation to its management's assessment of the effectiveness of its internal control over financial
reporting under Section 404(b) of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act (15 U.S.C. 7262(b)) by the registered public accounting firm that prepared or issued its audit report. ☒

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a shell company (as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act). Yes ☐ No ☒

The aggregate market value of the common stock held by non-affiliates of the registrant as of June 30, 2020, the last business day of the registrant's most recently completed
second fiscal quarter, was approximately $946.2 million based on the closing price of a share of common stock on June 30, 2020 as reported by the Nasdaq Global Select
Market, or Nasdaq, for such date. Shares of the registrant's common stock held by each executive officer, director and holder of 5% or more of the outstanding common
stock  have  been  excluded  in  that  such  persons  may  be  deemed  to  be  affiliates.  This  calculation  does  not  reflect  a  determination  that  certain  persons  are  affiliates  of  the
registrant for any other purpose.

As of February 22, 2021, the Registrant had 44,042,434 shares of common stock outstanding.

DOCUMENTS INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE

Part III incorporates information by reference from the Registrant’s definitive proxy statement to be filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission pursuant to
Regulation 14A, not later than 120 days after the end of the fiscal year covered by this Annual Report on Form 10-K, in connection with the Registrant’s 2021 Annual
Meeting of Stockholders.

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HEALTH CATALYST, INC.
Annual Report on Form 10-K
For the Year Ended December 31, 2020

Table of Contents

PART I.

Item 1.
Item 1A.
Item 1B.
Item 2.
Item 3.
Item 4.

Item 5.
Item 6.
Item 7.
Item 7A.
Item 8.
Item 9.
Item 9A.
Item 9B.

Item 10.
Item 11.
Item 12.
Item 13.
Item 14.

Item 15.
Item 16.

Business
Risk Factors
Unresolved Staff Comments
Properties
Legal Proceedings
Mine Safety Disclosures

PART II.

Market for Registrant’s Common Equity, Related Stockholders Matters, and Issuer Purchases of Equity Securities
Selected Consolidated Financial and Other Data
Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations
Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk
Consolidated Financial Statements and Supplementary Data
Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants on Accounting and Financial Disclosure
Controls and Procedures
Other Information

PART III.

Directors, Executive Officers, and Corporate Governance
Executive Compensation
Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management, and Related Stockholder Matters
Certain Relationships and Related Transactions, and Director Independence
Principal Accountant Fees and Services

PART IV.

Exhibits and Financial Statement Schedules
Form 10-K Summary
Signatures

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135

In this Annual Report on Form 10-K, “we,” “our,” “us,” “Health Catalyst,” and the “Company” refer to Health Catalyst, Inc. and its wholly-owned

subsidiaries.

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Special Note Regarding Forward-Looking Statements

PART I

This Annual Report on Form 10-K contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended,
and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. Forward-looking statements are based on our management’s beliefs and assumptions
and on information currently available to our management. All statements other than statements of historical facts are “forward-looking statements” for
purposes of these provisions, including those relating to future events or our future financial performance and financial guidance. In some cases, you can
identify  forward-looking  statements  by  terminology  such  as  “may,”  “might,”  “will,”  “should,”  “expect,”  “plan,”  “anticipate,”  “project,”  “believe,”
“estimate,” “predict,” “potential,” “intend” or “continue,” the negative of terms like these or other comparable terminology, and other words or terms of
similar meaning in connection with any discussion of future operating or financial performance. These statements are only predictions. All forward-looking
statements  included  in  this  Annual  Report  on  Form  10-K  are  based  on  information  available  to  us  on  the  date  hereof,  and  we  assume  no  obligation  to
update any such forward-looking statements. Any or all of our forward-looking statements in this document may turn out to be wrong. Actual events or
results may differ materially. Our forward-looking statements can be affected by inaccurate assumptions we might make or by known or unknown risks,
uncertainties and other factors. We discuss many of these risks, uncertainties and other factors in this Annual Report on Form 10-K in greater detail under
the  subheading  below  "Summary  of  Risk  Factors"  as  well  as  heading  “Item  1A—Risk  Factors.”  We  caution  investors  that  our  business  and  financial
performance are subject to substantial risks and uncertainties.

Summary of Risk Factors

• We operate in a highly competitive industry, and if we are not able to compete effectively, our business and results of operations will be harmed.

• We may be unable to successfully execute on our growth initiatives, business strategies, or operating plans.

•

•

•

If we fail to effectively manage our growth and organizational change, our business and results of operations could be harmed.

The recent global coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak could harm our business, results of operations, and financial condition.

If we do not continue to innovate and provide services that are useful to customers and users, we may not remain competitive, and our revenue and
results of operations could suffer.

• Our business could be adversely affected if our customers are not satisfied with our Solution.

•

If our existing customers do not continue or renew their contracts with us, renew at lower fee levels or decline to purchase additional technology
and services from us, it could have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition, and results of operations.

• Our Solution is dependent on our ability to source data from third parties, and such third parties could take steps to block our access to data, which

could impair our ability to provide our Solution or limit the effectiveness of our Solution.

•

•

Failure by our customers to obtain proper permissions and waivers may result in claims against us or may limit or prevent our use of data, which
could harm our business.

If our security measures are breached or unauthorized access to customer data is otherwise obtained or we cannot comply with evolving federal
and state healthcare regulatory and data privacy laws and regulations, our Solution may be perceived as not being secure, customers may reduce
the use of or stop using our Solution, and/or we may incur significant liabilities.

• Our results of operations have in the past fluctuated and may continue to fluctuate significantly, and if we fail to meet the expectations of analysts

or investors, our stock price and the value of an investment in our common stock could decline substantially.

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• Our pricing may change over time and our ability to efficiently price our Solution will affect our results of operations and our ability to attract or

retain customers.

•

If our Solution fails to provide accurate and timely information, or if our content or any other element of our Solution is associated with faulty
clinical decisions or treatment, we could have liability to customers, members, clinicians, or patients, which could adversely affect our results of
operations.

• We rely on third-party providers, including Microsoft Azure, for computing infrastructure, network connectivity, and other technology-related

services needed to deliver our Solution. Any disruption in the services provided by such third-party providers could adversely affect our business
and subject us to liability.

• We rely on Internet infrastructure, bandwidth providers, data center providers, other third parties, and our own systems for providing services to

our users, and any failure or interruption in the services provided by these third parties or our own systems could expose us to litigation,
potentially require us to issue credits to our customers, and negatively impact our relationships with users or customers, adversely affecting our
brand and our business.

Item 1. Business

Overview

We  are  a  leading  provider  of  data  and  analytics  technology  and  services  to  healthcare  organizations.  Our  Solution  comprises  a  cloud-based  data
platform, analytics software, and professional services expertise. Our customers, which are primarily healthcare providers, use our Solution to manage their
data,  derive  analytical  insights  to  operate  their  organizations,  and  produce  measurable  clinical,  financial,  and  operational  improvements.  We  envision  a
future where all healthcare decisions are data informed.

The Health Catalyst Way

Our Mission

Our mission is to be the catalyst for massive, measurable, data-informed healthcare improvement. We fulfill our mission through a confluence of the

following elements:

• Data Platform: integrate data in a flexible, open, and scalable platform to power healthcare’s digital transformation;

•

•

•

Analytics Applications: deliver insights on how to measurably improve through the use of analytics applications;

Services Expertise: enable data-informed improvement by providing analytical, clinical, financial, and operational experts; and

Engagement: attract, develop, and retain world-class team members by being a best place to work.

The Health Catalyst Flywheel

We accomplish our mission with each of our customers by following a process we call the Health Catalyst Flywheel or the Flywheel. This process
includes delivering on the three components of our Solution: data platform, analytics applications, and services expertise, which together drive measurable
improvements. At the center of the Flywheel is the engagement of our team members. Team member engagement is foundational to everything we do and
is the #1 priority of our CEO and broader leadership team. When team members feel connected to our mission and are listened to, cared for, and respected
at an extraordinary level, they produce outstanding work, which enables our customers to measurably improve. As customers realize improvements, their
trust in Health Catalyst builds, their engagement in our shared work increases, and they choose to renew and expand their relationship with us, while also
referring Health Catalyst to key decision-makers at other potential customers. Customer renewal, expansion, and referral produce growing, scalable, and
predictable financial performance.

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The virtuous cycle described above creates momentum for our business and is encapsulated in the following diagram:

Given the central importance of team member engagement to our company’s long-term success, we have been purposeful in defining and emphasizing
operating principles and cultural attributes that reinforce the commitment to our mission and to team member engagement. We consistently focus on our
operating principles and cultural attributes, as well as our mission and Flywheel (collectively, the Health Catalyst Way), which we review in all new hire
orientations, company-wide meetings, and board of directors’ meetings. Furthermore, we regularly measure our team member engagement and adjust our
practices based on team member feedback. We have demonstrated an elite, consistent level of team member engagement over time as demonstrated by a
95th to 99th percentile ranking by Gallup.

We will continue to emphasize the Health Catalyst Way, including our operating principles and cultural attributes, which we believe will be central to

our long-term success.

Our Operating Principles

The principles that govern our daily interactions include:

Improvement

• We are deeply committed to enabling our customers to achieve and sustain measurable clinical, financial, and operational improvements

• We nurture deep, long-term customer partnerships because achieving and sustaining improvement is a transformational journey (not a quick trip)

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• We pragmatically balance the vision, priority, and pace of innovation for data and analytics technology. We prioritize innovations that accelerate

improvement

• We  attract,  develop,  and  retain  experts  who  know  best  practices  in  their  domain,  leverage  analytics  for  insight,  and  accelerate  adoption  for

sustained improvement

Ownership

• We are accountable, as owners, to enable our customers’ measurable improvements

• We make decisions that balance and optimize the interests of our teammates, customers, patients, and owners

• We avoid an entitlement mentality and are good stewards of our assets

• We don’t micro-manage and we encourage autonomy while also supporting scalable consistency

Respect

• We recognize the immeasurable value of every individual

• We listen carefully to one another and learn from each of our colleagues

• We care deeply about our colleagues, including teammates, customers, patients, and owners

• We benefit from one another’s diverse backgrounds and experiences

Transparency

• We courageously tell the truth and we face the truth

• We are the same company, culture, and people in all settings

• We treat confidential information appropriately, and we protect the private data of our customers’ patients

• We recommend the best solutions for our customers, whether or not those solutions come from Health Catalyst

Our Cultural Attributes

The attributes we prioritize in hiring, retention, and promotion include:

Continuous Learner

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I can learn from anyone

I love to learn, and I am a lifelong student

I recognize my mistakes and correct them quickly; I fail fast

I am open to and respond favorably to feedback and coaching

I value my autonomy and use it to gain new knowledge and skills

I recognize that diversity of perspectives leads to better decisions

I am self-aware and seek improvement, personally and professionally

I watch, listen, and learn from others; thank them for their teachings; and apply the teachings to the mastery of my profession

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Hard Working

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I have a deep commitment to massive healthcare improvement

I stick to the task until the job is completed, then take on new work

I lead a balanced, healthy life that enables me to sustain my pace

I am willing to contribute more than my fair share to a project

I make personal sacrifices, as needed, to get the work done

I recognize that not every part of my job will be fun

Humble

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I listen first

I assume positive intent

I ask for help when I need it

I serve others without looking for recognition

I am secure in my own abilities (quiet self-confidence)

I seek to improve myself before trying to improve others

I am excited when others succeed and I offer sincere praise

I often acknowledge others for their contributions to my success

I frequently express gratitude and appreciation to those around me

World-Class

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I strive to be the best in the world at what I do by continuously learning

I recognize the importance of excellence in pursuit of our mission

I am well informed about events and trends in healthcare, data, and analytics

I actively contribute to the company’s pursuit of excellence - in the data and analytics technology we build, in the domain expertise we provide,
and in the functions that support this important work

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Business Overview

Healthcare  organizations  operate  in  an  environment  that  is  characterized  by  waste,  changing  economics,  and  data  complexity.  Organizations  that
leverage analytics to make data-informed decisions will be better positioned to succeed in this environment. Our customers, which are primarily healthcare
providers, use our Solution to manage their data, derive analytical insights to operate their organizations, and produce measurable clinical, financial, and
operational improvements.

The core elements of our Solution include:

• Data platform. The Data Operating System (DOS) is a healthcare-specific, cloud-based, open, flexible, and scalable data platform that provides
customers a single comprehensive environment to integrate and organize data from their disparate software systems. Our data platform has been
built with modern technology and is deeply embedded with healthcare domain knowledge, enabling a broad range of analytics. DOS has amassed
one of the largest and most comprehensive data assets of its kind, which enables us to deliver differentiated insights to our customers.

•

•

Analytics applications. Our analytics applications build on top of our data platform and are designed to analyze the most common problems our
customers  face.  These  analytics  applications  allow  our  customers  to  pinpoint  opportunities  for  measurable  improvement  across  their  entire
enterprise and are employed by a broad range of users from healthcare executives to front-line clinicians providing care. We developed this suite
of foundational and domain-specific software analytics applications over the last few years based on thoughtful measurement of the most critical
analytics needs faced by our customers. Our software analytics applications are further enhanced by a broad range of analytics accelerators, which
are pre-built, configurable data models with customizable visualizations that can be tailored to specific customer needs.

Services expertise. Our world-class team consists of both analytics experts, such as data analysts, data engineers, and data scientists, and domain
experts,  such  as  healthcare  administrators,  physicians,  and  nurses.  Our  services  are  comprised  of  data  &  analytics  services,  domain  expertise
services, outsourcing services, and implementation services. Our services team members leverage our technology to help our customers shorten
time-to-value and achieve sustainable measurable improvements. Examples of the services expertise we provide include opportunity analysis and
prioritization,  data  governance,  data  modeling  and  analysis,  quality  and  process  improvement  strategy,  cost  accounting,  data  abstraction,  and
population  health  strategies.  Our  approach  to  integrate  data,  analytics,  and  expertise  into  a  holistic  Solution  is  differentiated  and  has  been
recognized as among the best in the industry by multiple third parties, including KLAS, Chilmark Research, and Black Book.

We have generated over a thousand documented, customer-verified improvements across clinical, financial, and operational domains. In addition to the
positive ROI of customers utilizing our Solution versus a costly homegrown solution, each of these documented improvements is highly valuable to our
customers,  enabling  them  to  realize  substantial  clinical  improvements,  financial  savings,  or  operational  efficiencies.  As  we  deliver  measurable
improvements,  trust  builds,  and  our  customers  engage  with  us  more  broadly  and  refer  new  business.  This  is  evidenced  by  a  continued  increase  in
improvements  achieved  by  our  customers  over  time.  Customers  who  have  recently  contracted  with  us  have  already  started  achieving  measurable
improvements, while longer-standing customers have seen the number of annual improvements meaningfully grow.

We serve the majority of our customers through a subscription-based contract model. As of December 31, 2020, we served 74 customers with a DOS
subscription contract and over 300 other customers. The majority of our customers who are not on a DOS subscription contract are technology customers
resulting  from  our  historical  acquisitions.  Our  customers  include  academic  medical  centers,  integrated  delivery  networks,  community  hospitals,  large
physician  practices,  ACOs,  health  information  exchanges,  health  insurers,  and  other  risk-bearing  entities.  Example  customers  include  Acuitas  Health,
Allina Health, AlohaCare, Children's Hospital of Orange County, Community Health Network, Mass General Brigham, Northwell Health, Steward Health
Care, UnityPoint Health, and UPMC.

We  currently  employ  more  than  1,000  team  members  including  over  340  analytics  experts  and  over  75  domain  experts.  For  the  years  ended
December  31,  2020,  2019,  and  2018,  our  total  revenue  was  $188.8  million,  $154.9  million,  and  $112.6  million,  respectively.  For  the  years  ended
December  31,  2020,  2019,  and  2018,  we  incurred  net  losses  of  $115.0  million,  $60.1  million,  and  $62.0  million,  respectively.  For  the  years  ended
December  31,  2020,  2019,  and  2018,  our  Adjusted  EBITDA  was  $(21.3)  million,  $(27.4)  million,  and  $(38.1)  million,  respectively.  See  “Selected
Consolidated Financial and Other Data - Reconciliation of Non-GAAP Financial Measures” for more information about Adjusted EBITDA, including the
limitations of such measure and a reconciliation to the most directly comparable measure calculated in accordance with GAAP.

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Our Strengths

Our operational and financial success is based on the following key strengths:

Healthcare-specific, flexible, open, and scalable data platform. DOS was purpose-built to handle healthcare-specific data management and analytics
use cases, including the ingestion of disparate healthcare data sources. By linking healthcare-specific vocabularies and rules with a flexible and adaptable
framework, we enable faster and more repeatable analytics. As an open and self-service platform, we support the development of analytics and applications
on top of DOS, which accelerates the adoption and integration of our platform by our customers. The majority of analytics that are run on top of DOS are
client-generated as opposed to outputs of our applications. The scalable, cloud-based infrastructure enables quicker product iteration and deployment.

Integrated and comprehensive nature of our Solution creates measurable improvements. Through the delivery of our comprehensive and integrated
Solution  of  data,  analytics,  and  services  expertise,  we  enable  measurable  improvements  for  our  customers.  Our  Solution  has  generated  over  a  thousand
documented, customer-verified improvements across clinical, financial, and operational domains.

Attractive operating model. We have an attractive operating model due to the recurring nature of our revenue and the scalability of our data platform
and analytics applications. Our recurring revenue subscription model provides a high degree of revenue visibility. The open and flexible nature of DOS
makes it highly scalable, which allows us to deliver additional applications on top of DOS with limited incremental costs. We expect the benefits of our
operating model and cost structure to generate operating leverage in our business.

Unique and differentiated culture focused on team member engagement. Our leadership team’s commitment to the team member is central to our
long-term success. Our commitment to building and maintaining a culture where team members are highly engaged in our mission directly benefits not
only team members, but also customers and other stakeholders.

The team member experience is the #1 priority of our CEO and other members of our leadership team. On a daily basis, our leadership focuses on the
team  member  experience,  by  listening  carefully  to  team  member  feedback  and  making  changes  based  on  this  feedback,  by  erring  in  favor  of  the  team
member, and by working as an advocate for each team member. This focus enables team members to become highly engaged in fulfilling our mission to be
the catalyst for massive, measurable, data-informed improvement in healthcare.

This deep team member engagement in our mission leads team members to build world-class data and analytics technology and to provide industry-
leading expertise. The care that the leadership team shows to team members becomes the same care that team members show to our customers, and through
this care and commitment, our customers experience accelerating and measurable improvement, which leads them to renew, expand, and refer. By focusing
on the team member experience, our customers realize greater improvements, which leads to a high-growth, predictable business model.

Recognized industry leader by multiple third parties. The strength of our Solution has been recognized by multiple third-parties as among the best in
the  industry.  These  include  KLAS  Overall  Customer  Satisfaction  Scores  that  are  frequently  among  the  highest  in  the  peer  group,  as  well  as  Chilmark
Research and Black Book. We recognized early on that healthcare organizations need purpose-built technology products and services to support data-driven
insights, and have spent more than a decade building and commercializing our healthcare-specific Solution. We invested meaningful time and resources
over  the  last  decade  to  build  a  comprehensive  and  differentiated  set  of  products  and  services  for  our  customers,  which  is  not  easily  replicated  by  other
healthcare and/or technology companies. Our customers benefit from our technology innovation and expertise which allows them to avoid the significant
time, financial resources, and technical proficiency they would need to invest to build related capabilities in-house. Similarly, the overall complexity and
dynamic nature of healthcare require purpose-built products and services to address the challenges our customers face, preventing traditional technology
companies from easily leveraging and deploying existing platforms.

Tenured management team with healthcare technology experience. Health Catalyst is led by a team of healthcare and data veterans with many years
of combined experience leading digital transformation at health systems, such as Intermountain Healthcare. Our founders and executives collaborated for
nearly  a  decade  to  pioneer  and  develop  a  new  data  warehousing  architecture  that  resolves  many  of  the  problems  encountered  using  traditional  data
warehousing  methodologies.  The  unique  combination  of  talent  and  experience  across  healthcare  and  technology,  as  well  as  our  management  team’s
commitment to the Health Catalyst Way, underpin everything we do.

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Our Growth Strategies

Our growth strategies reflect our mission to be the catalyst for massive, measurable, data-informed healthcare improvement. Our focus on multiple

channels, as well as our collaborative company culture, results in high levels of sustainable growth. Our strategic levers to drive growth include:

• Grow  our  overall  customer  base.  We  have  a  substantial  opportunity  to  continue  growing  our  customer  base  through  our  active  sales  and
marketing strategy and significant word-of-mouth references. We currently estimate our total core addressable market to include more than 1,200
healthcare  organizations,  including  health  systems  and  risk-bearing  entities.  We  believe  there  is  ample  room  to  win  new  business  and  deepen
market penetration in our core market. Further, healthcare providers outside of the United States face similar challenges to those in the United
States and can implement our Solution to address them. We plan to opportunistically pursue international markets by expanding our business in
the United Kingdom, Canada, Southeast Asia, and the Middle East.

•

•

Expand  within  our  current  customer  base.  We  intend  to  deepen  and  expand  the  relationships  we  have  with  our  existing  customer  base.  Our
relationship with a new customer oftentimes starts through the use of targeted analytics applications and services to pinpoint and achieve a single
measurable clinical, financial, or operational improvement. As we deliver measurable improvements, trust builds, and our customers engage with
us more broadly and purchase additional applications and services. We have achieved continued DOS Subscription customer growth in part due to
strong customer retention and customer referrals. This is evidenced by our positive Dollar-based Retention Rates of 102%, 109%, and 107% for
the years ended December 31, 2020, 2019, and 2018, respectively. We will continue to invest in helping customers identify additional uses for our
Solution, ensuring they achieve measurable improvements throughout our relationship with them.

Add new analytics applications and services offerings. The expansion of our Solution and enhancement of our applications library will accelerate
as we deepen our customer relationships and add to our dataset. Because our platform is open and we partner with our customers, we are able to
identify  new  opportunities  for  further  improvements  and  leverage  that  insight  with  other  customers  across  our  core  market  to  develop  new
analytics applications and services offerings. We have used this process to build eight new software applications over the past few years, and we
will continue to invest in product development, particularly at the analytics applications layer of our technology stack.

• Grow our addressable market through additional healthcare business segment adjacencies. We believe there are significant applications for our
Solution outside of our core market, as evidenced by our recent expansion into the life sciences market and certain international markets. Other
business segment adjacencies include serving the employer space and additional types of providers and risk-bearing entities. While we believe
there are significant opportunities in our core market, these business segment agencies have the potential to significantly grow our addressable
market and business over time.

•

Selectively  pursue  acquisitions  and  partnerships.  We  plan  to  continue  evaluating  and  identifying  opportunities  where  we  can  leverage  our
platform  to  scale  and  consolidate  both  data  assets  and  best-of-breed  applications.  We  believe  that  competing  point  solutions  vendors  will  have
difficulty in growing their offerings into sustainable businesses, which we believe translates into a robust mergers and acquisitions pipeline for us.
We have a track record of identifying and integrating new and complementary capabilities, including our acquisitions of Healthcare Data Works,
Medicity, Able Health, Healthfinch, and Vitalware. Moreover, we believe the companies we partner with and acquire choose us because of our
collaborative, best-in-class culture which we view as a differentiating factor in sourcing acquisitions and partnerships.

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Our Solution

Our Solution empowers our customers to run a data-informed business. Our healthcare-specific, open, flexible, and scalable data platform, advanced
analytics  applications,  and  services  expertise  guide  our  customers  to  greater  levels  of  digital  maturity,  enabling  clinical,  financial,  and  operational
improvements. The diagram below illustrates the three layers of our comprehensive Solution.

Data Platform - the Data Operating System (DOS)

DOS is a healthcare-specific, open, flexible, and scalable data platform that allows customers to integrate and organize their disparate data sources to
enable analytics. It serves as a digital backbone, allowing customers to easily extract data from transactional source systems, combine disparate data sets
into  a  unified  source  of  truth  and  query  the  dataset  directly.  DOS  is  a  cloud-based  technology  that  we  primarily  provide  through  Microsoft  Azure  and
through our private data center. In order to enable more advanced feature development and functionality, we are in the process of migrating our customers
hosted in our private data center, and a few remaining on-premise customers, to Microsoft Azure.

DOS  was  uniquely  designed  and  purpose-built  to  handle  the  complex,  ever-evolving  nature  of  healthcare-specific  data.  This  includes  healthcare-
specific  terminology,  data  governance,  and  meta-data  management.  By  creating  healthcare-specific  data  models  to  organize  industry-specific  data,  we
enable faster and more repeatable analytics and insights. We have developed the capabilities to turn these insights into actions by connecting our analytics
into the workflow systems, such as an electronic health record (EHR or EMR).

Differentiating attributes of our DOS include:

• Data  warehouse.  We  believe  our  innovative  late-binding  architecture  has  a  proven  track  record  of  agility  and  adaptability  to  new  rules,

vocabularies, and data content. Our open and self-service platform enables database-level querying and custom analytics use-cases.

•

Source connectors. Our platform is designed to quickly ingest data from the numerous information systems and siloed data sources our customers
possess.  We  have  prebuilt  connectors  to  the  most  common  transactional  software  systems  used  by  healthcare  organizations.  The  DOS  data
management console enables customers to manage robust ETL processes and scheduling.

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•

•

Cloud-based. Modern cloud-based architecture is secure and scalable. Being cloud-based enables quicker product iteration and innovation.

Reusable data logic. Registries, value sets, and other data logic sit on top of the raw data and can be accessed, reused, and updated through open
APIs, enabling customer and third-party application development. We update hundreds of registries, value sets, and measure logic regularly. This
reusable, healthcare data content enables customers to achieve analytic value more quickly than leveraging homegrown or cross-industry products
and services.

• Machine  learning.  Embedded  within  DOS  are  machine  learning  algorithms  that  our  customers  can  easily  leverage  for  predictive  analytics.

Customers can also build their own machine learning data pipelines within DOS.

•

•

•

•

•

Terminology services. By standardizing the complex language used to code entries in various health records and clinical systems, DOS facilitates
decision support, consistent reporting, and analytics and interoperability.

Closed-loop EMR integration. Bridges the gap between insight and action by reducing data lag, interjecting knowledge at the point of decision-
making, including back into the workflow of source systems, such as an EMR.

Text processing. Enables the extraction of additional data currently trapped in various unstructured text blocks. The ability to gather insight from
clinical notes remains an area of untapped healthcare intelligence with tremendous potential.

Real-time streaming and interoperability. Near or real-time data streaming from the source all the way to the expression of that data through DOS,
supporting both transaction-level exchange of data and analytic processing.

Big data. Ability  to  access,  organize,  and  analyze  massive  and  unique,  structured  and  unstructured,  data  sets  allows  us  to  drive  differentiated
analytic insights for our customers.

Analytics Applications

We  have  thoughtfully  developed  several  scalable  analytics  applications  that  allow  us  to  deliver  the  right  data  to  the  right  place  at  the  right  time.
Combining  this  pioneering  technique  with  our  data  asset  of  more  than  one  hundred  million  patient  records,  our  customers  systematically  uncover
opportunities  for  actionable  interventions.  We  have  organized  our  analytics  applications  into  two  categories:  foundational  software  applications  and
domain-specific  software  applications.  In  addition,  we  have  created  a  suite  of  analytics  accelerators,  which  provide  customers  with  a  starting  point  to
leverage for tailored insights.

Foundational Software Applications

•

•

Registry  and  Measures  Authoring  (Population  Builder).  Enables  non-SQL  writers  like  clinicians  and  administrators  to  dynamically  author,
manage, view, and publish pre-built and custom population ruleset definitions using an elegant drag-and-drop interface. Rulesets can be published
as a registry, leveraged across the DOS analytics platform and augmented with summary metrics using our tools. These registries can be used for
internal quality improvement and research efforts or for reporting to external organizational registries.

Benchmarking  (Touchstone).  Uses  artificial  intelligence  to  proactively  identify  where  a  customer  is  performing  relative  to  benchmark  sets
composed of proprietary and publicly-available data; subsequently recommends and prioritizes opportunities for improvement.

• Dashboards and Reporting (Leading Wisely). Enables users to quickly and easily add clinical, financial, and operational measures in an executive
dashboard format. Measures are trended over time and updated on a near real-time basis from DOS. Users can customize information, share it
with others, and set their own alerts and notifications. As a result, executives and their teams are empowered to take control of the data deluge to
plan, prioritize improvement projects, create alignment among groups, strategize the best products and services, and communicate decisions more
effectively.

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Domain-Specific Software Applications

•

•

•

•

Activity-Based Costing (CORUS). Activity-based costing software application that leverages clinical and operational data from DOS to calculate a
true cost of clinical processes and patients on the most granular level. Enables CFOs, physicians, service line leaders, and clinical and financial
analysts to understand the true cost of providing care and relate those costs to patient outcomes.

Patient  Safety  (Patient  Safety  Monitor).  Trigger-based  surveillance  system  enabled  by  DOS.  This  application  monitors  patient-level  data  and
applies machine learning algorithms to predict whether a patient is currently at risk for a safety event so that the patient's clinicians can intervene
as they deem necessary to prevent harm events.

Care  Management.  Patient-centric  population  health  service  that  utilizes  data  integration,  patient  stratification  and  intake,  care  coordination,
patient engagement, and performance measurement to optimize care delivery for high-risk patients.

Population  Health  Foundations.  Product  suite  designed  to  help  health  systems  manage  risk-based  contracts  and  bundled  payment  models  and
allow providers to tailor patient care based upon population metrics and benchmarks.

• Quality and Regulatory Measures. Foundational product for integrating hundreds of measures across financial, regulatory, and quality departments
and  reporting  those  measures  to  third-party  entities  like  CMS.  Enables  proactive  measures  surveillance  to  enhance  outcomes  and  facilitates
monitoring behaviors, interventions, and activities needed to influence, manage, or change outcomes.

•

•

EMR  Embedded  Insights  (Care  Gap  Closure):  Cloud-based  product  suite  that  provides  a  workflow  integration  engine  delivering  insights  and
analytics into EMR workflows to automate physicians’ ability to close patient care gaps in real-time.

Revenue Improvement and Workflow Optimization: Revenue workflow optimization and analytics SaaS technology solution portfolio, including
products related to chargemaster management, price transparency and revenue integrity.

Analytics Accelerators

•

To further enhance our analytics applications we have also developed a library of tailored analytics accelerators. Analytics accelerators are pre-
built  data  models  and  customizable  visualizations  that  leverage  the  broad  set  of  integrated  data  stored  within  our  DOS  platform  for  a  specific
analytic use-case. Customers who utilize our analytics accelerators achieve a much faster time-to-value compared to building an analytic model
from  the  ground  up.  Our  customers  frequently  rely  on  our  analytics  expertise  to  customize  our  analytics  accelerators,  as  well  as  our  domain
expertise  in  order  to  successfully  leverage  our  analytics  accelerators  to  drive  data-informed  improvement.  The  breadth  of  our  analytics
accelerators  facilitates  analytic  insights  across  clinical,  financial,  and  operational  use-cases.  Our  suite  of  more  than  40  analytics  accelerators
provides highly-specific clinical, financial, and operational insights. Examples of these accelerators include:

•     Clinical: Sepsis, Readmissions, Heart Failure, Joint Replacement, CLABSI, and COPD;

•     Financial: Payment Model Analyzer, Financial Management, Revenue Cycle, and Hierarchical Condition Categories; and

•     Operational: Supply Chain, Patient Flow, Surgical Services, Labor Management, and Practice Management.

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Services Expertise

We provide a range of high-value-add professional services to help our customers implement and maximize the value of our Solution. Our professional
services experts combine industry-leading talent across multiple domain areas with a deep working knowledge of our technology to help our customers
achieve  a  faster  time-to-value  and  drive  more  meaningful  and  sustainable  measurable  improvements.  Our  services  expertise  can  be  provided  as  a
supplement to our customers’ existing teams or as an outsourced function for our customers. Our team is comprised of over 340 analytics experts and over
75 domain experts, including several nationally-recognized healthcare and analytics leaders.

Our domain experts provide services across a range of specialties, including:

Data and Analytics services expertise:

• Data Engineering Services: Help customers ingest data sources and provide consulting around DOS best practice and strategy around leveraging

new DOS features.

•

•

Analytic Engineer Services: Partner with clients to generate meaningful insights produced from Health Catalyst technology that lead improvement
efforts. Guides best practice and training.

Implementation Services: Implement and configure analytics applications.

• Data Science Services: Work with client teams to apply scientific methods, processes, algorithms, and systems to ask and answer questions using

data.  In addition, build software tools to enable self-service capabilities for customers.

•

Analytics  Strategy  Services:  Provide  agile  development  workshops,  continued  data  architecture  and  Extract  Transform  Load  support,
documentation and training, measure reporting efficiency, and prioritization and staff augmentation.

• Data  Governance  Services:  Offer  advisory  services  related  to  leveraging  customers’  unique,  strategic  data  assets,  managing  data  access  and

security, and establishing cross-functional governance structures.

Clinical, Financial, and Operational services expertise:

• Quality and Process Improvement Strategy: Organizational readiness assessments and opportunity analysis. Clinical pathways, best practices, and

protocol implementation. Lean methodology and clinical variation reduction recommendations.

•

•

•

•

Patient Safety Services: Transition from voluntary under-reporting to proactive prevention using data-driven triggers.

Cost Accounting Services: Expert analysis of fine-grain activity-based costing methods and cost-saving improvement opportunities.

Population  Health  and  Value-Based  Care  Services:  Organizational  transformation  services  to  enhance  abilities  to  take  on  cost  risk  for  patient
populations.

Abstraction Data Submission Services: Support in collecting quality and regulatory information and submitting it to various associations.

• Health Catalyst University - Educational Services: Hands-on courses, programs, and customizable training opportunities to provide our customers

with knowledge, practical skills, and take-home tools needed to drive improvement efforts.

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Our Customers

Our  customers  comprise  academic  medical  centers,  integrated  delivery  networks,  community  hospitals,  large  physician  practices,  ACOs,  health
information exchanges, health insurers, and other risk-bearing entities. Today, we help executives, administrators, clinicians, and technicians in hundreds of
hospitals and thousands of clinics. We work closely in collaboration with many key stakeholders including chief executive officers, chief financial officers,
chief information officers, chief technology officers, population health teams, and IT teams among others. From our perspective, discussions regarding data
and analytics strategy have oftentimes transitioned from a discussion with members of the IT department to an enterprise-wide, strategic discussion with
the C-suite and other leadership members. No customers represented more than 10% of our total revenue for the years ended December 31, 2020, 2019, and
2018.

Team Members and Culture

We currently employ more than 1,000 team members. We believe that we have good relationships with our team members. None of our team members

are subject to collective bargaining agreements or are represented by a union.

Our corporate culture is a critical component of our success. We believe that building and maintaining a remarkable culture benefits our customers and
team members. Our culture promotes an environment where team members trust each other, strive to continually learn, are motivated to lead hard-working
yet balanced lives, make decisions with integrity and humility in mind, communicate openly and honestly, embrace teamwork and collaboration, and enjoy
their days at work.

Our team members, who strive to uphold our values and live our mission every day, are at the forefront of cultivating and spreading this culture across
the healthcare organizations that we serve. This continuous interaction across the entire Health Catalyst community creates a virtuous cycle that further
reinforces our culture and fuels our growth.

Our team member satisfaction scores, as measured by Gallup, have consistently ranked in the 95th to 99th percentile and our KLAS Overall Customer
Satisfaction Score has regularly outpaced the segment average. We engage compensation consultants to enable us to make data informed decisions with
respect  to  our  compensation  and  benefit  packages  so  we  continue  to  attract  and  retain  top  talent.  Moreover,  we  have  received  numerous  awards  and
recognition for our culture and service to our customers. In total, we have been recognized 60 times as a “best place to work” by Glassdoor, Gallup, and
Modern  Healthcare,  among  others.  Additionally,  we  have  received  multiple  awards  for  customer  satisfaction  and  excellence  from  KLAS,  Chilmark
Research,  and  Black  Book.  For  example,  our  Chargemaster  Management  product,  a  new  revenue  analytics  product  addition  through  the  Vitalware
acquisition, was ranked Best in KLAS for 2020. We believe that these honors demonstrate the loyalty of our team members and our customers and that our
culture is driving the behaviors that will help fuel our future growth.

Sales and Marketing

We  market  and  sell  our  services  to  healthcare  organizations  primarily  in  the  United  States,  but  opportunistically  in  other  geographies,  including
Canada, the United Kingdom, the Middle East, and Southeast Asia. Our dedicated sales team identifies healthcare organizations that would benefit from
our  Solution.  Our  sales  team  works  closely  with  our  subject  matter  experts  to  foster  long-term  relationships  with  our  customers’  and  sales  prospects’
leadership teams. In the third quarter of each year, we hold the Healthcare Analytics Summit (HAS), an event showcasing data-informed improvement in
healthcare.

Research and Development

Our  ability  to  compete  depends  in  large  part  on  our  continuous  commitment  to  research  and  development  and  our  ability  to  rapidly  introduce  new
applications, technologies, features, and functionality. Our research and development organization is responsible for the design, development, and testing of
our  data  platform  and  analytics  applications.  Based  on  customer  feedback  and  needs,  we  focus  our  efforts  on  developing  new  products,  functionality,
applications,  and  core  technologies  and  further  enhancing  the  usability,  functionality,  reliability,  performance,  and  flexibility  of  our  data  platform  and
existing analytics applications. Research and development expenses were $53.5 million, $46.3 million, and $38.6 million for our years ended December 31,
2020, 2019, and 2018, respectively.

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Intellectual Property

We rely on a combination of patent, trademark, and copyright laws in the United States as well as confidentiality procedures and contractual provisions

to protect our trade secrets, including proprietary technology, databases, and our brand.

As of December 31, 2020, we had eleven issued U.S. patents, two issued Canadian patents, one issued Great Britain patent, and one issued European
patent,  which  expire  between  2026  and  2037,  and  two  patent  applications  pending  in  the  United  States  and  two  patent  application  pending  in  Canada.
These patents and patent applications seek to protect proprietary inventions relevant to our business. We intend to pursue additional patent protection to the
extent we believe it would be beneficial to our business and cost-effective.

We have registered “Health Catalyst” and our flame design logo as trademarks in the United States and certain other jurisdictions. We also have filed
other trademark applications that are meaningful to our business in the United States and certain other jurisdictions and will pursue additional trademark
registrations  to  the  extent  we  believe  it  would  be  beneficial  and  cost-effective.  We  are  the  registered  holder  of  a  variety  of  domain  names  that  include
“Health Catalyst” and similar variations.

We  maintain  our  intellectual  property  and  confidential  business  information  in  a  number  of  ways.  For  instance,  we  have  a  policy  of  requiring  all
employees  and  consultants  to  execute  confidentiality  agreements  upon  the  commencement  of  an  employment  or  consulting  relationship  with  us.  Our
employee agreements also require relevant employees to assign to us all rights to any inventions made or conceived during their employment with us in
accordance with applicable law. In addition, we have a policy of requiring individuals and entities with which we discuss potential business relationships to
sign non-disclosure agreements. Lastly, our agreements with customers include confidentiality and non-disclosure provisions.

Competition

We have experienced, and expect to continue to experience, intense competition from a number of companies. Our primary competitors are industry-
agnostic  analytics  companies,  EHR  companies,  point  solution  vendors,  as  well  as  healthcare  organizations  that  perform  their  own  analytics.  Industry-
agnostic  analytics  companies  include  IBM,  Tableau,  and  Qlik.  EHR  companies  include  Cerner  Systems  and  Epic  Systems.  Point  solution  companies
include Optum Analytics, Premier, Strata Decision Technology, Craneware, and Intersystems.

The principal competitive factors in our industry include:

•

•

•

•

•

level of customer satisfaction;

ease of deployment and use of solutions and applications;

breadth and depth of solution and application functionality;

access to, and ability to glean insights from, large data sets;

brand awareness and reputation;

• modern and adaptive technology platform;

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

capability for customization, configurability, integration, security, scalability, and reliability of applications;

total cost of ownership;

ability to innovate and respond to customer needs rapidly;

size of customer base and level of user adoption;

regulatory compliance verification and functionality;

domain expertise with respect to healthcare; and

ability to integrate with legacy enterprise infrastructures and third-party applications.

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We believe that we compete favorably with our competitors on the basis of these factors. However, many of our competitors and potential competitors
have significantly greater financial, technological, and other resources and name recognition than we do and more established distribution networks and
relationships with healthcare providers. As a result, many of these companies may respond more quickly to new or emerging technologies and standards
and changes in customer requirements. These companies may be able to invest more resources in research and development, strategic acquisitions, sales
and marketing, patent prosecution, litigation, and financing capital equipment acquisitions for their customers.

Government Regulation

Our business is subject to extensive, complex, and rapidly changing federal and state laws and regulations. Various federal and state agencies have
discretion to issue regulations and interpret and enforce healthcare laws. While we believe we comply in all material respects with applicable healthcare
laws  and  regulations,  these  regulations  can  vary  significantly  from  jurisdiction  to  jurisdiction,  and  interpretation  of  existing  laws  and  regulations  may
change periodically. Federal and state legislatures also may enact various legislative proposals that could materially impact certain aspects of our business.
The following are summaries of key federal and state laws and regulations that impact our operations:

Government Regulation of Health-Related and Other Personal Information

In the United States, numerous state and federal laws and regulations, including data breach notification laws, health information privacy laws, and
consumer  protection  laws  and  regulations,  govern  the  collection,  use,  disclosure,  and  protection  of  health-related  and  other  personal  information  could
apply to our operations or the operations of our customers.

For  example,  the  federal  Health  Insurance  Portability  and  Accountability  Act  of  1996,  as  amended  by  the  Health  Information  Technology  for
Economic  and  Clinical  Health  Act  of  2009,  and  regulations  implemented  thereunder  (collectively,  HIPAA)  impose  obligations  on  “covered  entities,”
including certain health care providers, health plans, and health care clearinghouses, and their respective “business associates” that create, receive, maintain
or transmit protected health information (PHI) for or on behalf of such covered entities, as well as their covered subcontractors with respect to safeguarding
the privacy, security and transmission of PHI.

Since we provide services that require us to use and disclose PHI on behalf of our covered entity customers, we are a business associate. Our covered
entity customers are required under HIPAA to enter into business associate agreements (BAAs) with us and we are required to enter into BAAs with our
downstream subcontractors that access or otherwise process PHI on our behalf. As a business associate, we are required to comply with the HIPAA security
standards, and certain provisions of the HIPAA privacy standards and breach notification rule, and may be subject to significant civil and criminal penalties
for failure to do so.

In  addition  to  HIPAA,  most  states  have  enacted  patient  confidentiality  laws  that  protect  against  the  disclosure  of  confidential  medical  information,
including privacy safeguards, and security standards. Many states have also adopted data security breach notification requirements. Such state laws, if more
stringent than HIPAA requirements, are not preempted by the federal requirements, and we must comply with them. In addition, certain states have adopted
other  laws  governing  the  use  and  disclosure  of  personal  information.  For  example,  California  recently  enacted  the  California  Consumer  Privacy  Act
(CCPA),  which  went  into  effect  on  January  1,  2020.  The  CCPA,  among  other  things,  creates  new  data  privacy  obligations  for  covered  companies  and
provides  new  privacy  rights  to  California  residents,  including  the  right  to  access  and  delete  their  personal  information,  opt  out  of  certain  personal
information sharing, and receive detailed information about how their personal information is used. The CCPA also creates a private right of action with
statutory damages for certain data breaches, thereby potentially increasing risks associated with a data breach. Further, the California Privacy Rights Act
(CPRA) was recently voted into law by California residents. The CPRA significantly amends the CCPA, and imposes additional data protection obligations
on covered companies doing business in California, including additional consumer rights processes and opt outs for certain uses of sensitive data. It also
creates  a  new  California  data  protection  agency  specifically  tasked  to  enforce  the  law,  which  would  likely  result  in  increased  regulatory  scrutiny  of
California businesses in the areas of data protection and security. The substantive requirements for businesses subject to the CPRA will go into effect on
January 1, 2023, and become enforceable on July 1, 2023.

Federal  and  state  consumer  protection  laws  are  being  applied  increasingly  by  the  FTC,  Federal  Communications  Commission  and  states’  attorneys
general  to  regulate  the  collection,  use,  storage  and  disclosure  of  personal  or  patient  information,  through  websites  or  otherwise,  and  to  regulate  the
presentation  of  website  content  and  to  regulate  direct  marketing,  including  telemarketing  and  telephonic  communication.  Courts  may  also  adopt  the
standards for fair information practices promulgated by the FTC, which concern consumer notice, choice, security, and access.

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Fraud, Waste, and Abuse

Even though we do not directly order or provide healthcare services that are reimbursable by Medicare, Medicaid or other third-party payors or submit
claims or receive reimbursement from any such payor, certain federal and state healthcare laws and regulations pertaining to fraud, abuse and waste apply
or  may  apply  to  our  business  and  to  the  financial  arrangements  through  which  we  market,  sell  and  provide  our  services  to  our  healthcare  provider
customers. These laws and regulations include or may include the following:

•

•

The  federal  Anti-Kickback  Statute  makes  it  illegal  for  any  person  to  knowingly  and  willfully  solicit,  receive,  offer,  or  pay  any  remuneration
(including any kickback, bribe, or rebate), directly or indirectly, overtly or covertly, in cash or in kind, in exchange for, or intended to induce or
reward,  including  arranging  for  or  recommending,  either  the  referral  of  an  individual,  or  the  purchase,  lease,  order,  prescription,  or
recommendation of any good, facility, item or service for which payment may be made, in whole or in part, under a federal healthcare program,
such as the Medicare and Medicaid program. A person or entity does not need to have actual knowledge of the federal Anti-Kickback Statute or
specific intent to violate it to have committed a violation.

The federal civil and criminal false claims laws, such as the federal False Claims Act, and civil monetary penalties laws impose criminal and civil
penalties and authorizes civil whistleblower or qui tam actions, against individuals or entities for, among other things: knowingly presenting, or
causing to be presented, to a federal government healthcare program, claims for payment that are false or fraudulent; making, using or causing to
be made or used, a false statement or record material to payment of a false or fraudulent claim or obligation to pay or transmit money or property
to  the  federal  government;  or  knowingly  concealing  or  knowingly  and  improperly  avoiding  or  decreasing  an  obligation  to  pay  money  to  the
federal government. The government may deem entities to have “caused” the submission of false or fraudulent claims by, for example, providing
inaccurate billing or coding information to our customers. In addition, the government may assert that a claim including items or services resulting
from  a  violation  of  the  federal  Anti-Kickback  Statute  constitutes  a  false  or  fraudulent  claim  for  purposes  of  the  federal  False  Claims  Act.
Moreover, private individuals have the ability to bring actions on behalf of the U.S. government under the federal False Claims Act as well as
under the false claims laws of several states.

• HIPAA  also  contains  a  provision  that  imposes  criminal  and  civil  liability  for  knowingly  and  willfully  executing,  or  attempting  to  execute,  a
scheme to defraud any healthcare benefit program (including private payors) or obtain, by means of false or fraudulent pretenses, representations,
or promises, any of the money or property owned by, or under the custody or control of, any healthcare benefit program, regardless of the payor
(e.g., public or private) and knowingly and willfully falsifying, concealing or covering up by any trick or device a material fact or making any
materially false statements in connection with the delivery of, or payment for, healthcare benefits, items, or services. Similar to the federal Anti-
Kickback Statute, a person or entity does not need to have actual knowledge of the statute or specific intent to violate it in order to have committed
a violation. Similarly, the federal false statements statute prohibits knowingly and willfully falsifying, concealing, or covering up a material fact or
making any materially false statement in connection with the delivery of or payment for healthcare benefits, items, or services.

In addition, many states have similar fraud and abuse statutes and regulations that apply regardless of the payor, including commercial payors and self-
pay  patients.  Violations  of  federal  and  state  fraud  and  abuse  laws  may  be  punishable  by  criminal  and/or  civil  sanctions,  including  significant  penalties,
fines, disgorgement, additional reporting requirements and oversight under a corporate integrity agreement or similar agreement to resolve allegations of
noncompliance with these laws, imprisonment and/or exclusion or suspension from federal and state healthcare programs such as Medicare and Medicaid,
and debarment from contracting with the U.S. government.

Corporate Practice of Medicine and Fee-Splitting Laws

In many states, there are laws that that prohibit business entities, such as us, from providing professional medical services or directly employing or
otherwise  exercising  control  over  professional  judgment  or  medical  decisions  by  physicians  or  other  licensed  health  care  professionals  (such  activities
generally  referred  to  as  the  “corporate  practice  of  medicine”).  Corporate  practice  of  medicine  regulations  and  other  similar  laws  may  also  prevent  fee-
splitting,  or  the  sharing  of  professional  service  income  with  non-professional  or  business  interests.  Overseeing  a  care  coordination  or  care  management
team could be alleged in some cases to involve treatment or diagnosis of patients which requires a clinic license or other state license or permission. Any
determination  that  we  are  acting  in  the  capacity  of  a  healthcare  provider  and  acting  improperly  as  a  healthcare  provider,  exercising  undue  influence  or
control over a healthcare provider or impermissibly sharing fees with a healthcare provider, may result in additional compliance requirements, expense, and
liability to us, and require us to change or terminate some portions of our contractual arrangements or business.

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Patient Safety Organization Certification and Other Certification Requirements

Our patient safety organization (PSO) is certified by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), an agency of the Department of Health
and Human Services (HHS). We must meet certain requirements to maintain this certification. In addition, there may be other federal and state certification
requirements that we may be required to meet from time to time in connection with our Solution. We cannot be certain that our Solution will continue to
meet these standards. The failure to comply with these certification requirements could result in the loss of certification.

Interoperability  Standards.  ONC  is  charged  under  the  21st  Century  Cures  Act  with  developing  a  Trusted  Exchange  Framework  that  establishes
governance requirements for trusted health information exchange in the United States. ONC has developed the U.S. Common Data Set for Interoperability
which may lay the groundwork for future data exchange requirements for trusted exchange. ONC continues to modify and refine these standards. We may
incur increased software development and administrative expense and delays in delivering technology and services if we need to update our services to
conform to these varying and evolving requirements. In addition, delays in interpreting these standards may result in postponement or cancellation of our
clients’ decisions to purchase our services. If our services are not compliant with these evolving standards, our market position and sales could be impaired,
and we may have to invest significantly in changes to our technology and services.

st

The 21  Century Cures Act includes provisions related to data interoperability, information blocking, and patient access. CMS and the ONC recently
issued final rules related to these provisions, which include, among other things, requirements surrounding information blocking, changes to ONC's Health
IT Certification Program and requirements that CMS-regulated payors make relevant claims/care data and provider directory information available through
standardized patient access and provider directory application programming interfaces (APIs) that connect to provider electronic health records. Any failure
to adequately comply with these rules may adversely impact our business and our ability to compete.

In a regulatory climate that is uncertain, our operations may be subject to direct and indirect adoption, expansion or reinterpretation of various federal
and  state  laws  and  regulations.  Compliance  with  these  amended  and/or  future  laws  and  regulations  may  require  us  to  change  our  practices  at  an
undeterminable and possibly significant initial monetary and annual expense. There could be laws and regulations applicable to our business that we have
not  identified  or  that,  if  changed,  may  apply  to  our  business  operations.  Additionally,  the  introduction  of  new  services  may  require  us  to  comply  with
additional, yet undetermined, laws and regulations.

U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA)

The FDA regulates medical or health-related software, including machine learning functionality and predictive algorithms, if such software falls within
the  definition  of  a  “medical  device”  under  the  Federal  Food,  Drug,  and  Cosmetic  Act  (FDCA).  Medical  devices  are  subject  to  extensive  and  rigorous
regulation  by  the  FDA  and  by  other  federal,  state  and  local  authorities.  The  FDCA  and  related  regulations  govern  the  conditions  of  safety,  efficacy,
clearance,  approval,  manufacturing,  quality  system  requirements,  labeling,  packaging,  distribution,  storage,  recordkeeping,  reporting,  marketing,
advertising, and promotion of medical devices. However, historically, the FDA has exercised enforcement discretion for certain low-risk software, and has
issued  several  guidance  documents  outlining  its  approach  to  the  regulation  of  software  as  a  medical  device.  In  addition,  the  21st  Century  Cures  Act
includes  exemptions  for  certain  medical-related  software,  including  software  used  for  administrative  support  functions  at  a  healthcare  facility,  software
intended  for  maintaining  or  encouraging  a  healthy  lifestyle,  software  designed  to  store  electronic  health  records,  software  for  transferring,  storing,  or
displaying medical device data or in vitro diagnostic data, and certain clinical decision support software. Accordingly, we believe our currently marketed
products are not currently regulated by the FDA as medical devices, or are otherwise subject to FDA’s current enforcement discretion policies.

FDA Premarket Clearance and Approval Requirements - Unless an exemption applies, each medical device commercially distributed in the United
States requires either FDA clearance of a 510(k) premarket notification, or approval of a premarket approval application (PMA). Under the FDCA, medical
devices are classified into one of three classes—Class I, Class II or Class III—depending on the degree of risk associated with each medical device and the
extent of manufacturer and regulatory control needed to ensure its safety and effectiveness. Class I includes devices with the lowest risk to the patient and
are those for which safety and effectiveness can be assured by adherence to the FDA’s General Controls for medical devices, which include compliance
with  the  applicable  portions  of  the  Quality  System  Regulation  (QSR),  facility  registration  and  product  listing,  reporting  of  adverse  medical  events,  and
truthful  and  non-misleading  labeling,  advertising,  and  promotional  materials.  Class  II  devices  are  subject  to  the  FDA’s  General  Controls,  and  special
controls as deemed necessary by the FDA to ensure the safety and effectiveness of the device. These special controls can include performance standards,
postmarket surveillance, patient registries and FDA guidance documents.

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While most Class I devices are exempt from the 510(k) premarket notification requirement, manufacturers of most Class II devices are required to
submit to the FDA a premarket notification under Section 510(k) of the FDCA requesting permission to commercially distribute the device. The FDA’s
permission to commercially distribute a device subject to a 510(k) premarket notification is generally known as 510(k) clearance. Devices deemed by the
FDA  to  pose  the  greatest  risks,  such  as  life-sustaining,  life-supporting  or  some  implantable  devices,  or  devices  that  have  a  new  intended  use,  or  use
advanced technology that is not substantially equivalent to that of a legally marketed device, are placed in Class III, requiring approval of a PMA. Some
pre-amendment devices are unclassified, but are subject to the FDA’s premarket notification and clearance process in order to be commercially distributed.

Post-market Regulation  -  After  a  device  is  cleared  or  approved  for  marketing,  numerous  and  pervasive  regulatory  requirements  continue  to  apply.

These include:

•

establishment registration and device listing with the FDA;

• QSR requirements, which require manufacturers, including third-party manufacturers, to follow stringent design, testing, control, documentation

and other quality assurance procedures during all aspects of the design and manufacturing process;

•

•

labeling and marketing regulations, which require that promotion is truthful, not misleading, fairly balanced and provide adequate directions for
use  and  that  all  claims  are  substantiated,  and  also  prohibit  the  promotion  of  products  for  unapproved  or  “off-label”  uses  and  impose  other
restrictions on labeling; FDA guidance on off-label dissemination of information and responding to unsolicited requests for information;

clearance  or  approval  of  product  modifications  to  510(k)-cleared  devices  that  could  significantly  affect  safety  or  effectiveness  or  that  would
constitute a major change in intended use of one of our cleared devices;

• medical device reporting regulations, which require that a manufacturer report to the FDA if a device it markets may have caused or contributed to
a death or serious injury, or has malfunctioned and the device or a similar device that it markets would be likely to cause or contribute to a death or
serious injury, if the malfunction were to recur;

•

•

•

•

correction, removal and recall reporting regulations, which require that manufacturers report to the FDA field corrections and product recalls or
removals if undertaken to reduce a risk to health posed by the device or to remedy a violation of the FDCA that may present a risk to health;

complying with requirements governing Unique Device Identifiers on devices and also requiring the submission of certain information about each
device to the FDA’s Global Unique Device Identification Database;

the FDA’s recall authority, whereby the agency can order device manufacturers to recall from the market a product that is in violation of governing
laws and regulations; and

post-market  surveillance  activities  and  regulations,  which  apply  when  deemed  by  the  FDA  to  be  necessary  to  protect  the  public  health  or  to
provide additional safety and effectiveness data for the device.

Manufacturers of medical device products marketed in the United States are required to comply with the applicable portions of the QSR, which cover
the  methods  and  the  facilities  and  controls  for  the  design,  manufacture,  testing,  production,  processes,  controls,  quality  assurance,  labeling,  packaging,
distribution, installation and servicing of finished devices intended for human use. The QSR also requires, among other things, maintenance of a device
master file, device history file, and complaint files. Device manufacturers are also subject to periodic scheduled or unscheduled inspections by the FDA.
The FDA has broad regulatory compliance and enforcement powers.

If the FDA determines that we failed to comply with applicable regulatory requirements, including a determination that our software products require
prior FDA clearance or approval to be legally marketed in the United States, it can take a variety of compliance or enforcement actions, which may result in
any of the following sanctions: warning letters, untitled letters, fines, injunctions, consent decrees and civil penalties; recalls, withdrawals, or administrative
detention or seizure of our products; operating restrictions or partial suspension or total shutdown of production; refusing or delaying requests for 510(k)
marketing clearance or PMA approvals of new products or modified products; withdrawing 510(k) clearances or PMA approvals that have already been
granted; refusal to grant export or import approvals for our products; or criminal prosecution.

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Foreign Regulations

Our subsidiaries in the United Kingdom and Singapore are subject to additional regulations by the Government of the United Kingdom, as well as its
subdivisions, and the Government of Singapore, respectively. These include federal and local corporation requirements, restrictions on exchange of funds,
employment-related laws and qualification for tax status.

Foreign  Data  Collection.  The  collection  and  use  of  personal  health  data  in  the  European  Economic  Area  (EEA)  is  governed  by  various  laws
concerning privacy, data protection and data security, most notably the General Data Protection Regulation 2016/679 (GDPR). The GDPR applies to any
company established in the EEA as well as to those outside the EEA if they collect and use personal data in connection with offering goods or services to
individuals in the EEA or the monitoring of their behavior. The GDPR enhances data protection obligations for processors and controllers of personal data,
including, for example, expanded disclosures about how personal information is to be used, limitations on retention of information, mandatory data breach
notification requirements and onerous new obligations on services providers. The GDPR also imposes strict rules on the transfer of personal data out of the
EEA to other countries, including the United States; in July 2020, the Court of Justice of the European Union limited how organizations could lawfully
transfer personal data from the EEA to the United States by invalidating the EU-US Privacy Shield and imposing further restrictions on use of the standard
contractual clauses, which could increase our costs and our ability to efficiently process personal data from the EEA. Non-compliance with the GDPR may
result in monetary penalties of up to €20 million or 4% of worldwide revenue, whichever is higher. The GDPR may impose additional responsibility and
liability  in  relation  to  personal  data  that  we  process  and  we  may  be  required  to  put  in  place  additional  mechanisms  ensuring  compliance  with  data
protection rules. In addition, member states of the EEA may impose further obligations relating to the processing of health data, which could further add to
our compliance costs and limit how we process this information. From January 1, 2021, we may be subject to the GDPR and also the United Kingdom
(UK) GDPR, which, together with the amended UK Data Protection Act 2018, retains the GDPR in UK national law. The UK GDPR mirrors the fines
under the GDPR, e.g. fines up to the greater of €20 million (£17.5 million) or 4% of global turnover. The relationship between the United Kingdom and the
European  Union  in  relation  to  certain  aspects  of  data  protection  law  remains  unclear,  and  it  is  unclear  how  United  Kingdom  data  protection  laws  and
regulations  will  develop  in  the  medium  to  longer  term,  and  how  data  transfers  to  and  from  the  United  Kingdom  will  be  regulated  in  the  long  term.
Currently there is a four to six-month grace period agreed in the EU and UK Trade and Cooperation Agreement, ending June 30, 2021 at the latest, while
the parties discuss an adequacy decision. However, it is not clear whether (and when) an adequacy decision may be granted by the European Commission
enabling data transfers from EU member states to the UK long term without additional measures. These changes will lead to additional costs and increase
our overall risk exposure. We also may become subject to similar laws and regulations in other countries outside of the EEA in which we do business.

Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) and Foreign Anti-Bribery Laws. The FCPA makes it illegal for U.S. persons, including U.S. companies, and
their subsidiaries, directors, officers, employees, and agents, to promise, authorize or make any corrupt payment, or otherwise provide any item of value,
directly or indirectly, to any foreign official or any foreign political party or party official to obtain or retain business. Violations of the FCPA can also
result in violations of other U.S. laws, including anti-money laundering, mail and wire fraud, and conspiracy laws. There are severe penalties for violating
the FCPA. In addition, the Company may also be subject to other non-U.S. anti-corruption or anti-bribery laws, such as the U.K. Bribery Act 2010.

Export Controls. Economic and trade sanctions programs that are administered by OFAC prohibit or restrict transactions to or from, and dealings with
specified countries, their governments, and in certain circumstances, with individuals and entities that are specially designated nationals of those countries,
and  other  sanctioned  persons,  including  narcotics  traffickers  and  terrorists  or  terrorist  organizations.  Further,  federal  regulations  impose  authorization,
reporting, and/or licensing requirements prior to the export of certain software that incorporates encryption technology. These requirements may apply to
our Solution to the extent that our software with encryption functionality is implemented abroad or is hosted on servers in a foreign country to provide
services to customers outside the United States. In addition, various countries also regulate the import of certain encryption technology, including through
import permitting and licensing requirements, and have enacted laws that could limit our customers’ ability to import our technology into those countries.

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Corporate Information

Health Catalyst, Inc. (Health Catalyst) was incorporated under the laws of Delaware in September 2011. We were formerly known as HQC Holdings,
Inc. In March 2017, we changed our name to Health Catalyst, Inc. Our principal executive offices are located at 10897 South River Front Parkway #300,
South Jordan, Utah 84095, and our telephone number is (801) 708-6800. We completed our initial public offering of shares of our common stock, also
referred  to  as  our  IPO,  in  July  2019,  and  our  common  stock  is  listed  on  Nasdaq  under  the  symbol  “HCAT.”  Our  corporate  website  address  is
www.healthcatalyst.com.  Information contained on or accessible through our website is not part of this Annual Report on Form 10-K.

Human Capital Management

At the center of the Flywheel described above is the engagement of our team members. Team member engagement is foundational to everything we do
and  is  the  #1  priority  of  our  CEO  and  broader  leadership  team.  When  team  members  feel  connected  to  our  mission  and  are  listened  to,  cared  for,  and
respected  at  an  extraordinary  level,  they  produce  outstanding  work,  which  enables  our  customers  to  measurably  improve.  As  customers  realize
improvements, their trust in Health Catalyst builds, their engagement in our shared work increases, and they choose to renew and expand their relationship
with  us,  while  also  referring  Health  Catalyst  to  key  decision-makers  at  other  potential  customers.  Customer  renewal,  expansion,  and  referral  produce
growing, scalable, and predictable financial performance.

Our key human capital management objectives include, among others: (i) attracting, developing, and retaining a diverse and talented workforce; (ii)
providing opportunities for learning, development, career growth, and movement within Health Catalyst; (iii) evaluating compensation and benefits, and
rewarding performance; (iv) investing in physical, emotional, and financial health of team members; (v) obtaining team member feedback; (vi) maintaining
and enhancing our culture and mission; and (vii) communicating with our board of directors on a routine basis on key topics. We have implemented and
continue to develop many programs designed to achieve these priorities, some of which are further described below.

As of December 31, 2020, we had more than 1,000 team members, almost all of whom are located in the United States. We have not experienced any
work stoppages, and we consider our team member relations to be good. We encourage you to review the Environmental, Social and Governance pages of
our website at https://www.healthcatalyst.com/environmental-social-governance/ (ESG Website) for more detailed information regarding our human capital
programs and initiatives. The information on our website is not incorporated by reference into this Annual Report on Form 10-K.

Team Member Engagement

We regularly engage with our team members to assess their job satisfaction, including conducting regular team member surveys and hosting monthly
all team member meetings in which leadership answers questions from team members. We use information from these sources, among others, to improve
our ability to attract, develop, and retain talented team members who will help advance our mission.

Compensation, Benefits and Wellness

In addition to market-competitive base pay, short-term bonus incentives, and long-term equity incentives, we provide comprehensive team member

benefits and a variety of other health and wellness resources. We are committed to fair compensation and opportunity in our workplace.

Pay Equity

We are committed to ensuring our team members receive equal pay for equal work. We establish components and ranges of compensation based on
market and benchmark data. Within this context, we strive to pay all employees equitably within a reasonable range, taking into consideration factors such
as  role;  market  data;  internal  equity;  job  location;  relevant  experience;  and  individual,  business  unit,  and  company  performance,  among  others.  We
regularly  review  our  compensation  practices  and  analyze  the  equity  of  compensation  decisions.  We  institute  measures,  such  as  communications  and
trainings,  to  recognize,  interrupt  and  prevent  bias  in  hiring,  performance  management,  and  compensation  decisions  and  we  provide  resources  to  further
develop managers and leaders to help them make equitable decisions about pay.

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Diversity and Inclusion

We are committed to fostering a culture of inclusion and belonging, and to building a diverse workforce to drive innovation and collective growth,
which we believe is critical to our success. We continue to formalize and invest in our diversity and inclusion initiatives as further described on the ESG
website listed above. These diversity and inclusion efforts – spearheaded by Trudy Sullivan, our Chief Diversity & Inclusion Officer, and our four affinity
groups in partnership with hundreds of our team members – focus on diversity and inclusion in our workforce, in our workplace and in healthcare. We
continue  to  focus  upon  inclusive  recruitment  and  hiring  practices  to  source  diverse  talent  and  mitigate  potential  bias  throughout  the  hiring  process,
including expanding our internship program to include remote workplace options, attending Women of Color STEM and the Black Engineer of the Year
Awards (BEYA) conference and job fairs and recognizing our two Modern Healthcare Technology Leader Science Spectrum Trailblazer Awards winners at
BEYA.  Our  Shades  affinity  group  for  team  members  of  color  contributes  to  the  marketing  and  design  of  our  AI  driven  Health  Equity  Assessment  and
Guidance Solution to overcome disparities in care in the healthcare ecosystem. Over the past year, we continued to expand our diversity training for our
team members with the creation and launch of our Diversity Dialogue Series, which included outside speakers.

Growth and Development

We invest significant resources to develop talent and actively foster a learning culture where team members are empowered to drive their personal and
professional growth. We offer extensive onboarding and regular training programs to prepare our team members at all levels for career progression and
individual  development.  We  also  offer  annual  continuing  education  reimbursement  to  allow  team  members  to  be  continuous  learners  and  seek  new
challenges.

Flexible Work Environment

We help our team members succeed by providing flexibility in where and how they work. For many years, we have enabled team members to have
flexible work arrangements, including a large percentage of remote team members. We believe these arrangements can increase team member’s ownership,
satisfaction and productivity, as well as enable us to hire from a broader, more diverse pool of talent. In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, we allowed
all team members to be remote to protect the health, safety and wellness of our team members. We continue to support our workforce with the technology
and infrastructure necessary to work from a remote location, including a work equipment and utilities reimbursement program to help our team member
improve their dynamic workspaces.

Available Information

Our Annual Report on Form 10-K, Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q, Current Reports on Form 8-K, proxy statement, and all amendments to these
filings, are available free of charge from our investor relations website (https://ir.healthcatalyst.com/financial-information/sec-filings) as soon as reasonably
practicable following our filing with or furnishing to the Securities and Exchange Commission, or the SEC, of any of these reports. The SEC’s website
(https://www.sec.gov) contains reports, proxy and information statements, and other information regarding issuers that file electronically with the SEC.

Our investors and others should note that we announce material information to the public about our company, products and services, and other issues
through  a  variety  of  means,  including  our  website  (https://www.healthcatalyst.com/),  our  investor  relations  website  (https://ir.healthcatalyst.com/),  press
releases, SEC filings, public conference calls, and social media, in order to achieve broad, non-exclusionary distribution of information to the public.

We encourage our investors and others to review the information we make public in these locations as such information could be deemed to be material
information. Please note that this list may be updated from time to time. The contents of any website referred to in this Annual Report on Form 10-K are
not intended to be incorporated into this Annual Report on Form 10-K or in any other report or document we file.

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Item 1A. Risk Factors

You should carefully consider the following risk factors, in addition to the other information contained in this Annual Report on Form 10-K, including
the section of this report titled “Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations” and our financial statements
and related notes. If any of the events described in the following risk factors and the risks described elsewhere in this report occurs, our business, operating
results and financial condition could be seriously harmed. This Annual Report on Form 10-K also contains forward-looking statements that involve risks
and  uncertainties.  Our  actual  results  could  differ  materially  from  those  anticipated  in  the  forward-looking  statements  as  a  result  of  factors  that  are
described below and elsewhere in this report.

Risks Related to Our Business and Industry

We operate in a highly competitive industry, and if we are not able to compete effectively, our business and results of operations will be harmed.

The market for healthcare solutions is intensely competitive. We compete across various segments within the healthcare market, including with respect to
data analytics and technology platforms, healthcare consulting, care management and coordination, population health management, and health information
exchange. Competition in our market involves rapidly changing technologies, evolving regulatory requirements and industry expectations, frequent new
product  introductions,  and  changes  in  customer  requirements.  If  we  are  unable  to  keep  pace  with  the  evolving  needs  of  our  customers  and  continue  to
develop and introduce new applications and services in a timely and efficient manner, demand for our Solution may be reduced and our business and results
of operations will be adversely affected.

We face competition from industry-agnostic analytics companies and EHR companies, such as Epic Systems and Cerner. We also compete with other large,
well-financed,  and  technologically  sophisticated  entities.  Some  of  our  current  large  competitors,  such  as  Optum  Analytics  and  IBM,  have  greater  name
recognition,  longer  operating  histories,  significantly  greater  resources  than  we  do,  and/or  more  established  distribution  networks  and  relationships  with
healthcare  providers.  As  a  result,  our  current  and  potential  competitors  may  be  able  to  respond  more  quickly  and  effectively  than  we  can  to  new  or
changing opportunities, technologies, standards, or customer requirements. In addition, current and potential competitors have established, and may in the
future establish, cooperative relationships with vendors of complementary products, or services to increase the availability of their products or services to
the  marketplace.  Current  or  future  competitors  may  consolidate  to  improve  the  breadth  of  their  products,  directly  competing  with  our  Solution.
Accordingly, new competitors may emerge that have greater market share, larger customer bases, greater breadth and volume of data, more widely adopted
proprietary technologies, broader offerings, greater marketing expertise, greater financial resources, and larger sales forces than we have, which could put
us at a competitive disadvantage.

Further, in light of these advantages, even if our Solution is more effective than the product or service offerings of our competitors, current or potential
customers might select competitive products and services in lieu of purchasing our Solution. We face competition from niche vendors, who offer stand-
alone products and services, and from existing enterprise vendors, including those currently focused on software products, which have information systems
in place with customers in our target markets. These existing enterprise vendors may now, or in the future, offer or promise products or services with less
functionality than our Solution, but offer ease of integration with existing systems and that leverage existing vendor relationships. Increased competition is
likely to result in pricing pressures, which could negatively impact our sales, profitability, or market share.
Our  patient  engagement,  population  health,  and  care  coordination  services  face  competition  from  a  wide  variety  of  market  participants.  For  example,
certain  health  systems  have  developed  their  own  population  health  and  care  coordination  systems.  If  we  fail  to  distinguish  our  offerings  from  the  other
options available to healthcare providers, the demand for and market share of those offerings may decrease.

Changes in the healthcare industry could affect the demand for our Solution, cause our existing contracts to be terminated, and negatively impact the
process of negotiating future contracts.

As the healthcare industry evolves, changes in our customer and vendor bases may reduce the demand for our Solution, result in the termination of existing
contracts or certain services provided under existing contracts, and make it more difficult to negotiate new contracts on terms that are acceptable to us. For
example,  the  increasing  market  share  of  EHR  companies  in  data  analytic  services  at  hospital  systems  may  cause  our  existing  customers  to  terminate
contracts with us in order to engage EHR companies to provide these services. Similarly, customer and vendor consolidation results in fewer, larger entities
with increased bargaining power and the ability to demand terms that are unfavorable to us. If these trends continue, we cannot assure you that we will be
able  to  continue  to  maintain  or  expand  our  customer  base,  negotiate  contracts  with  acceptable  terms,  or  maintain  our  current  pricing  structure,  and  our
revenue may decrease.

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General  reductions  in  expenditures  by  healthcare  organizations,  or  reductions  in  such  expenditures  within  market  segments  that  we  serve,  could  have
similar impacts with regard to our Solution. Such reductions may result from, among other things, reduced governmental funding for healthcare; a decrease
in the number of, or the market exclusivity available to, new drugs coming to market; or adverse changes in business or economic conditions affecting
healthcare payors or providers, the pharmaceutical industry, or other healthcare companies that purchase our services (e.g., changes in the design of health
plans). In addition, changes in government regulation of the healthcare industry could potentially negatively impact our existing and future contracts. Any
of  these  changes  could  reduce  the  purchase  of  our  Solution  by  such  customers,  reducing  our  revenue  and  possibly  requiring  us  to  materially  revise  our
offerings.  In  addition,  our  customers’  expectations  regarding  pending  or  potential  industry  developments  may  also  affect  their  budgeting  processes  and
spending plans with respect to our Solution.

The recent global coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak could harm our business, results of operations, and financial condition.

In  March  2020,  the  World  Health  Organization  declared  COVID-19  a  global  pandemic.  This  pandemic,  which  has  continued  to  spread,  and  the  related
adverse  public  health  developments,  including  orders  to  shelter-in-place,  travel  restrictions,  and  mandated  business  closures,  have  adversely  affected
workforces,  organizations,  governments,  customers,  economies,  and  financial  markets  globally,  leading  to  an  economic  downturn  and  increased  market
volatility.  It  has  also  disrupted  the  normal  operations  of  many  businesses,  including  ours.  This  outbreak,  as  well  as  intensified  measures  undertaken  to
contain the spread of COVID-19, could decrease healthcare industry spending, adversely affect demand for our technology and services, cause one or more
of our customers to file for bankruptcy protection or go out of business, cause one or more of our customers to fail to renew, terminate, or renegotiate their
contracts, affect the ability of our sales team to travel to potential customers and the ability of our professional services teams to conduct in-person services
and  trainings,  impact  expected  spending  from  new  customers,  negatively  impact  collections  of  accounts  receivable,  and  harm  our  business,  results  of
operations, and financial condition.

Further,  the  sales  cycle  for  a  new  customer  of  our  technology  and  services,  which  has  averaged  approximately  one  year,  could  lengthen,  resulting  in  a
potentially longer delay between increasing operating expenses and the generation of corresponding revenue, if any. We cannot predict with any certainty
whether and to what degree the disruption caused by the COVID-19 pandemic and reactions thereto will continue and expect to face difficulty accurately
predicting  our  internal  financial  forecasts.  The  outbreak  also  presents  challenges  as  our  entire  workforce  is  currently  working  remotely  and  shifting  to
assisting new and existing customers who are also generally working remotely. It is not possible for us to predict the duration or magnitude of the adverse
results of the outbreak and its effects on our business, results of operations, or financial condition at this time.

We may be unable to successfully execute on our growth initiatives, business strategies, or operating plans.

We are continually executing a number of growth initiatives, strategies, and operating plans designed to enhance our business. For example, we recently
expanded  our  data  analytics  services  into  the  payor  and  life  sciences  markets.  We  may  not  be  able  to  successfully  complete  these  growth  initiatives,
strategies, and operating plans and realize all of the benefits, including growth targets and cost savings, that we expect to achieve or it may be more costly
to do so than we anticipate. A variety of factors could cause us not to realize some or all of the expected benefits. These factors include, among others,
delays in the anticipated timing of activities related to such growth initiatives, strategies, and operating plans, increased difficulty and cost in implementing
these efforts, including difficulties in complying with new regulatory requirements and the incurrence of other unexpected costs associated with operating
the business. Moreover, our continued implementation of these programs may disrupt our operations and performance. As a result, we cannot assure you
that we will realize these benefits. If, for any reason, the benefits we realize are less than our estimates or the implementation of these growth initiatives,
strategies,  and  operating  plans  adversely  affect  our  operations  or  cost  more  or  take  longer  to  effectuate  than  we  expect,  or  if  our  assumptions  prove
inaccurate, our business, financial condition, and results of operations may be materially adversely affected.

If we fail to provide effective professional services and high-quality customer support, our business and reputation would suffer.

Our professional services and high-quality, ongoing customer support are important to the successful marketing and sale of our products and services and
for the renewal of existing customer agreements. Providing these services and support requires that our professional services and support personnel have
healthcare,  technical,  and  other  knowledge  and  expertise,  making  it  difficult  for  us  to  hire  qualified  personnel  and  scale  our  professional  services  and
support  operations.  The  demand  on  our  customer  support  organization  will  increase  as  we  expand  our  business  and  pursue  new  customers,  and  such
increased support could require us to devote significant development services and support personnel, which could strain our team and infrastructure and
reduce our profit margins. If we do not help our customers quickly resolve any post-implementation issues and provide effective ongoing customer support,
our ability to sell additional products and services to existing and future customers could suffer and our reputation would be harmed.

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Our sales cycles can be long and unpredictable, and our sales efforts require a considerable investment of time and expense. If our sales cycle
lengthens or we invest substantial resources pursuing unsuccessful sales opportunities, our results of operations and growth would be harmed.

Our sales process entails planning discussions with prospective customers, analyzing their existing solutions and identifying how these potential customers
can use and benefit from our Solution. The sales cycle for a new customer, from the time of prospect qualification to the completion of the first sale, has
averaged approximately one year and in some cases has exceeded two years. We spend substantial time, effort and money in our sales efforts without any
assurance that our efforts will result in the sale of our Solution.

In addition, our sales cycle and timing of sales can vary substantially from customer to customer because of various factors, including the discretionary
nature of potential customers’ purchasing and budget decisions, the announcement or planned introduction of new analytics applications or services by us
or our competitors, and the purchasing approval processes of potential customers. If our sales cycle lengthens or we invest substantial resources pursuing
unsuccessful sales opportunities, our results of operations and growth would be harmed.

Our DOS platform or our analytics applications may not operate properly, which could damage our reputation, give rise to claims against us, or divert
application of our resources from other purposes, any of which could harm our business and results of operations.

Proprietary software development is time-consuming, expensive, and complex. Unforeseen difficulties can arise. We may encounter technical obstacles,
and it is possible that we will discover additional problems that prevent our applications from operating properly.

If our systems do not function reliably or fail to meet user or customer expectations in terms of performance, customers could assert liability claims against
us or attempt to cancel their contracts with us, and members could choose to terminate their use of our Solution. This could damage our reputation and
impair our ability to attract or retain customers and members.

Information services as complex as those we offer have, in the past, contained, and may in the future develop or contain, undetected defects, vulnerabilities,
or errors. We cannot be assured that material performance problems or defects in our software will not arise in the future. Errors may result from sources
beyond our control, including the receipt, entry, or interpretation of patient information; the interface of our software with legacy systems that we did not
develop;  or  errors  in  data  provided  by  third  parties.  Despite  testing,  defects  or  errors  may  arise  in  our  existing  or  new  software  or  service  processes
following introduction to the market.

Customers  rely  on  our  Solution  to  collect,  manage,  and  report  clinical,  financial,  and  operational  data,  and  to  provide  timely  and  accurate  information
regarding medical treatment and care delivery patterns. They may have a greater sensitivity to service errors and security vulnerabilities than customers of
software  products  in  general.  Clinicians  may  also  rely  on  our  predictive  models  for  care  delivery  prioritization,  and  to  inform  treatment  protocols.
Limitations of liability and disclaimers that purport to limit our liability for damages related to defects in our software or content which we may include in
our subscription and services agreements may not be enforced by a court or other tribunal or otherwise effectively protect us from related claims. In most
cases, we maintain liability insurance coverage, including coverage for errors and omissions. However, it is possible that claims could exceed the amount
of our applicable insurance coverage or that this coverage may not continue to be available on acceptable terms or insufficient amounts.

In light of this, defects, vulnerabilities, and errors and any failure by us to identify and address them could result in loss of revenue or market share; liability
to customers, members, their patients, or others; failure to achieve market acceptance or expansion; diversion of development and management resources;
delays in the introduction of new services; injury to our reputation; and increased service and maintenance costs. Defects, vulnerabilities, or errors in our
software  and  service  processes  might  discourage  existing  or  potential  customers  or  members  from  purchasing  services  from  us.  Correction  of  defects,
vulnerabilities, or errors could prove to be impossible or impractical. The costs incurred in correcting any defects, vulnerabilities, or errors or in responding
to resulting claims or liability may be substantial and could adversely affect our results of operations.

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If we are not able to maintain and enhance our reputation and brand recognition, our business and results of operations will be harmed.

We believe that maintaining and enhancing our reputation and brand recognition is critical to our relationships with existing customers and to our ability to
attract  new  customers.  The  promotion  of  our  brands  may  require  us  to  make  substantial  investments  and  we  anticipate  that,  as  our  market  becomes
increasingly competitive, these marketing initiatives may become increasingly difficult and expensive. Our marketing activities may not be successful or
yield increased revenue, and to the extent that these activities yield increased revenue, the increased revenue may not offset the expenses we incur and our
results of operations could be harmed.

In addition, any factor that diminishes our reputation or that of our management, including failing to meet the expectations of our customers, or any adverse
publicity surrounding one of our investors or customers, could make it substantially more difficult for us to attract new customers. If we do not successfully
maintain and enhance our reputation and brand recognition, our business may not grow and we could lose our relationships with customers, which would
harm our business, results of operations, and financial condition.

If we do not continue to innovate and provide services that are useful to customers and users, we may not remain competitive, and our revenue and
results of operations could suffer.

The market for healthcare in the United States is in the early stages of structural change and is rapidly evolving toward a more value-based care model. Our
success  depends  on  our  ability  to  keep  pace  with  technological  developments,  satisfy  increasingly  sophisticated  customer  and  user  requirements,  and
sustain market acceptance. Our future financial performance will depend in part on growth in this market and on our ability to adapt to emerging demands
of this market, including adapting to the ways our customers or users access and use our Solution. Although we have built eight new software analytics
applications in the last three years, we may not be able to sustain this rate of innovation. Our competitors are constantly developing products and services
that  may  become  more  efficient  or  appealing  to  our  customers  or  users.  As  a  result,  we  must  continue  to  invest  significant  resources  in  research  and
development in order to enhance our existing services and introduce new high-quality services and applications that customers will want, while offering our
Solution at competitive prices. If we are unable to predict user preferences or industry changes, or if we are unable to modify our Solution on a timely or
cost-effective basis, we may lose customers and users. Our results of operations would also suffer if our innovations are not responsive to the needs of our
customers,  are  not  appropriately  timed  with  market  opportunity,  or  are  not  effectively  brought  to  market,  including  as  the  result  of  delayed  releases  or
releases that are ineffective or have errors or defects. As technology continues to develop, our competitors may be able to offer results that are, or that are
perceived to be, substantially similar to, or better than, those generated by our Solution. This may force us to compete on additional service attributes and to
expend significant resources in order to remain competitive.

Our business could be adversely affected if our customers are not satisfied with our Solution.

We  depend  on  customer  satisfaction  to  succeed  with  respect  to  our  cloud-based  solutions.  Our  sales  organization  is  dependent  on  the  quality  of  our
offerings, our business reputation, and the strong recommendations from existing customers. If our cloud-based software does not function reliably or fails
to meet customer expectations in terms of performance and availability, customers could assert claims against us or terminate their contracts with us or
publish negative feedback. This could damage our reputation and impair our ability to attract or retain customers. Furthermore, we provide professional
services to customers to support their use of our applications and to achieve measurable clinical, financial, and operational improvements.

Any failure to maintain high-quality professional services, or a market perception that we do not maintain high-quality professional services, could harm
our  reputation,  adversely  affect  our  ability  to  sell  our  Solution  to  existing  and  prospective  customers,  and  harm  our  business,  results  of  operations  and
financial condition.

If our existing customers do not continue or renew their contracts with us, renew at lower fee levels or decline to purchase additional technology and
services from us, it could have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition, and results of operations.

We expect to derive a significant portion of our revenue from the renewal of existing customer contracts and sales of additional technology and services to
existing customers. As part of our growth strategy, for instance, we have recently focused on expanding our Solution among current customers. As a result,
selling additional technology and services is critical to our future business, revenue growth, and results of operations.

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Factors that may affect our ability to sell additional technology and services include, but are not limited to, the following:

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the price, performance, and functionality of our Solution;

the availability, price, performance, and functionality of competing solutions;

our ability to develop and sell complementary technology and services;

the stability, performance, and security of our hosting infrastructure and hosting services;

our ability to continuously deliver measurable improvements;

health systems’ demand for professional services to augment their internal data analytics function;

changes in healthcare laws, regulations, or trends;

the business environment of our customers and, in particular, headcount reductions by our customers; and

the impact of any natural disasters or public health emergencies, such as the COVID-19 pandemic.

We enter into subscription contracts with our customers for access to our Solution. Many of these contracts have initial terms of one to three years. Most of
our customers have no obligation to renew their subscriptions for our Solution after the initial term expires. Although we have long-term contracts with
many  customers,  these  contracts  may  be  terminated  by  the  customer  before  their  term  expires  for  various  reasons,  such  as  changes  in  the  regulatory
landscape and poor performance by us, subject to certain conditions. For example, after a specified period, certain of these contracts are terminable for
convenience by our customers, subject to providing us with prior notice. Certain of our contracts may be terminated by the customer immediately following
repeated failures by us to provide specified levels of service over periods ranging from six months to more than a year. Certain of our contracts may be
terminated immediately by the customer if we lose applicable third-party licenses, go bankrupt, or lose our liability insurance. If any of our contracts with
our customers are terminated, we may not be able to recover all fees due under the terminated contract and we will lose future revenue from that customer,
which may adversely affect our results of operations. We expect that future contracts will contain similar provisions.

In addition, our customers may negotiate terms less advantageous to us upon renewal, which may reduce our revenue from these customers. Our future
results of operations also depend, in part, on our ability to upgrade and enhance our Solution. If our customers fail to renew their contracts, renew their
contracts upon less favorable terms, or at lower fee levels or fail to purchase new technology and services from us, our revenue may decline or our future
revenue growth may be constrained.

Our results of operations have in the past fluctuated and may continue to fluctuate significantly, and if we fail to meet the expectations of analysts or
investors, our stock price and the value of an investment in our common stock could decline substantially.

Our results of operations are likely to fluctuate, and if we fail to meet or exceed the expectations of securities analysts or investors, the trading price of our
common stock could decline. Moreover, our stock price may be based on expectations of our future performance that may be unrealistic or that may not be
met. Some of the factors that could cause our revenue and results of operations to fluctuate from quarter to quarter include:

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the extent to which our Solution achieves or maintains market acceptance;

our ability to introduce new applications, updates, and enhancements to our existing applications on a timely basis;

new competitors and the introduction of enhanced products and services from new or existing competitors;

the length of our contracting and implementation cycles and our fulfillment periods for our Solution;

the mix of revenue generated from professional services as compared to technology subscriptions;

the financial condition of our current and future customers;

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changes in customer budgets and procurement policies;

changes in regulations or marketing strategies;

the impact of COVID-19 on our customers, partners and business;

the amount and timing of our investment in research and development activities;

the amount and timing of our investment in sales and marketing activities;

technical difficulties or interruptions to our DOS platform or analytics applications;

our ability to hire and retain qualified personnel;

changes in the regulatory environment related to healthcare;

regulatory compliance costs;

the timing, size, and integration success of potential future acquisitions;

unforeseen legal expenses, including litigation and settlement costs; and

buying patterns of our customers and the related seasonality impacts on our business.

Many of these factors are not within our control, and the occurrence of one or more of them might cause our results of operations to vary widely. As such,
we  believe  that  quarter-to-quarter  comparisons  of  our  revenue  and  results  of  operations  may  not  be  meaningful  and  should  not  be  relied  upon  as  an
indication of future performance.

A significant portion of our operating expense is relatively fixed in nature in the short term, and planned expenditures are based in part on expectations
regarding  future  revenue  and  profitability.  Accordingly,  unexpected  revenue  shortfalls,  lower-than-expected  revenue  increases  as  a  result  of  planned
expenditures,  and  longer-than-expected  impact  on  profitability  and  margins  as  a  result  of  planned  expenditures  may  decrease  our  gross  margins  and
profitability and could cause significant changes in our results of operations from quarter to quarter. In addition, our future quarterly results of operations
may  fluctuate  and  may  not  meet  the  expectations  of  securities  analysts  or  investors.  If  this  occurs,  the  trading  price  of  our  common  stock  could  fall
substantially, either suddenly or over time.

Our pricing may change over time and our ability to efficiently price our Solution will affect our results of operations and our ability to attract or retain
customers.

In the past, we have adjusted our prices as a result of offering new applications and services and customer demand. In the fourth quarter of 2018, we began
to introduce new pricing for our Solution to new customers, the full effect of which we expect would be realized in future years. While we determined these
prices  based  on  prior  experience  and  feedback  from  customers,  our  assessments  may  not  be  accurate  and  we  could  be  underpricing  or  overpricing  our
Solution, which may require us to continue to adjust our pricing model. Furthermore, as our applications and services change, then we may need to, or
choose to, revise our pricing as our prior experience in those areas will be limited. For example, we introduced our subscription model in 2015, and we may
need to continually refine our pricing model. Such changes to our pricing model or our inability to efficiently price our Solution could harm our business,
results of operations, and financial condition and impact our ability to predict our future performance.

If our Solution fails to provide accurate and timely information, or if our content or any other element of our Solution is associated with faulty clinical
decisions or treatment, we could have liability to customers, members, clinicians, or patients, which could adversely affect our results of operations.

Our applications, content, and services may be used by customers to support clinical decision-making by providers and interpret information about patient
medical histories, treatment plans, medical conditions, and the use of particular medications. If our applications, content, or services are associated with
faulty clinical decisions or treatment, then customers or their patients could assert claims against us that could result in substantial costs to us, harm our
reputation in the industry, and cause demand for our Solution to decline.

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Our analytics services may be used by our customers to inform clinical decision-making, provide access to patient medical histories, and assist in creating
patient  treatment  plans.  Therefore,  if  data  analyses  are  presented  incorrectly  in  our  applications  or  they  are  incomplete,  or  if  we  make  mistakes  in  the
capture or input of these data, adverse consequences, including death, may occur and give rise to product liability, medical malpractice liability, and other
claims against us by customers, clinicians, patients, or others. We often have little control over data accuracy, yet a court or government agency may take
the position that our storage and display of health information exposes us to personal injury liability or other liability for wrongful delivery or handling of
healthcare services or erroneous health information.

Our  clinical  guidelines,  algorithms,  and  protocols  may  be  viewed  as  providing  healthcare  professionals  with  guidance  on  care  management,  care
coordination,  or  treatment  decisions.  If  our  content,  or  content  we  obtain  from  third  parties,  contains  inaccuracies,  or  we  introduce  inaccuracies  in  the
process of implementing third-party content, it is possible that patients, physicians, consumers, the providers of the third-party content, or others may sue
us if they are harmed as a result of such inaccuracies. We cannot assure you that our software development, editorial, and other quality control procedures
will be sufficient to ensure that there are no errors or omissions in any particular content or our software or algorithms.

The assertion of such claims and ensuing litigation, regardless of its outcome, could result in substantial cost to us, divert management’s attention from
operations, damage our reputation, and decrease market acceptance of our Solution. We attempt to limit by contract our liability for damages, have our
customers  assume  responsibility  for  clinical  treatment,  diagnoses,  medical  oversight,  and  dosing  decisions,  and  require  that  our  customers  assume
responsibility for medical care and approve key algorithms, clinical guidelines, clinical protocols, and data. Despite these precautions, the allocations of
responsibility and limitations of liability set forth in our contracts may not be enforceable, be binding upon patients, or otherwise protect us from liability
for damages. Furthermore, general liability and errors and omissions insurance coverage and medical malpractice liability coverage may not continue to be
available on acceptable terms or may not be available in sufficient amounts to cover one or more large claims against us. In addition, the insurer might
disclaim coverage as to any future claim. One or more large claims could exceed our available insurance coverage.

If any of these events occur, they could materially adversely affect our business, financial condition, or results of operations.
Although we carry insurance covering medical malpractice claims in amounts that we believe are appropriate in light of the risks attendant to our business,
successful  medical  liability  claims  could  result  in  substantial  damage  awards  that  exceed  the  limits  of  our  insurance  coverage.  In  addition,  professional
liability  insurance  is  expensive  and  insurance  premiums  may  increase  significantly  in  the  future,  particularly  as  we  expand  our  Solution.  As  a  result,
adequate professional liability insurance may not be available to our providers or to us in the future at acceptable costs or at all.

Any claims made against us that are not fully covered by insurance could be costly to defend against, result in substantial damage awards against us and
divert  the  attention  of  our  management  and  our  providers  from  our  operations,  which  could  have  a  material  adverse  effect  on  our  business,  financial
condition, and results of operations. In addition, any claims may adversely affect our business or reputation.

We derive a significant portion of our revenue from our largest customers. The loss, termination, or renegotiation of any contract could negatively
impact our results.

Historically,  we  have  relied  on  a  limited  number  of  customers  for  a  significant  portion  of  our  total  revenue  and  accounts  receivable.  Our  three  largest
customers during 2020 comprised 5.6%, 4.6%, and 3.9% of our revenue, or 14.1% in the aggregate. Our three largest customers during 2019 comprised
4.6%, 3.6%, and 3.6% of our revenue, or 11.8% in the aggregate. The sudden loss of any of our largest customers or the renegotiation of any of our largest
customer contracts could adversely affect our results of operations. In the ordinary course of business, we engage in active discussions and renegotiations
with  our  customers  in  respect  of  the  solutions  we  provide  and  the  terms  of  our  customer  agreements,  including  our  fees.  As  our  customers’  businesses
respond to market dynamics and financial pressures, and as our customers make strategic business decisions in respect of the lines of business they pursue
and programs in which they participate, we expect that certain of our customers will, from time to time, seek to restructure their agreements with us. In the
ordinary  course,  we  renegotiate  the  terms  of  our  agreements  with  our  customers  in  connection  with  renewals  or  extensions  of  these  agreements.  These
discussions  and  future  discussions  could  result  in  reductions  to  the  fees  and  changes  to  the  scope  of  services  contemplated  by  our  original  customer
contracts and consequently could negatively impact our revenue, business, and prospects.

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Because we rely on a limited number of customers for a significant portion of our revenue, we depend on the creditworthiness of these customers. Our
customers are subject to a number of risks including reductions in payment rates from governmental payors, higher than expected healthcare costs, and lack
of predictability of financial results when entering new lines of business. If the financial condition of our customers declines, our credit risk could increase.
Should one or more of our significant customers declare bankruptcy, be declared insolvent, or otherwise be restricted by state or federal laws or regulation
from continuing in some or all of their operations, this could adversely affect our ongoing revenue, the collectability of our accounts receivable, and affect
our bad debt reserves and net income.

Because we generally recognize technology and professional services revenue ratably over the term of the contract for our services, a significant
downturn in our business may not be reflected immediately in our results of operations, which increases the difficulty of evaluating our future
financial performance.

We generally recognize technology and professional services revenue ratably over the term of a contract. As a result, a substantial portion of our revenue is
generated from contracts entered into during prior periods. Consequently, a decline in new contracts in any quarter may not affect our results of operations
in that quarter but could reduce our revenue in future quarters. Additionally, the timing of renewals or non-renewals of a contract during any quarter may
only  affect  our  financial  performance  in  future  quarters.  For  example,  the  non-renewal  of  a  subscription  agreement  late  in  a  quarter  will  have  minimal
impact on revenue for that quarter but will reduce our revenue in future quarters. Accordingly, the effect of significant declines in sales may not be reflected
in our short-term results of operations, which would make these reported results less indicative of our future financial results. By contrast, a non-renewal
occurring early in a quarter may have a significant negative impact on revenue for that quarter and we may not be able to offset a decline in revenue due to
non-renewal with revenue from new contracts entered into in the same quarter. In addition, we may be unable to quickly adjust our costs in response to
reduced revenue.

If we are unable to implement and maintain effective internal controls over financial reporting, investors may lose confidence in the accuracy and
completeness of our financial reports and the market price of our common stock could be adversely affected.

As a public company, we are required to maintain internal controls over financial reporting and to report any material weaknesses in such internal controls.
Section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act requires that we evaluate and determine the effectiveness of our internal controls over financial reporting. However,
we are not currently required to comply with the SEC rules that implement Section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act and are therefore not required to make a
formal assessment of the effectiveness of our internal control over financial reporting for that purpose.

As a public company, we are required to provide an annual management report on the effectiveness of our internal control over financial reporting. Many of
the  internal  controls  we  have  implemented  pursuant  to  the  Sarbanes-Oxley  Act  are  process  controls  with  respect  to  which  a  material  weakness  may  be
found whether or not any error has been identified in our reported financial statements. This may be confusing to investors and result in damage to our
reputation, which may harm our business. Additionally, the proper design and assessment of internal controls over financial reporting are subject to varying
interpretations,  and,  as  a  result,  application  in  practice  may  evolve  over  time  as  new  guidance  is  provided  by  regulatory  and  governing  bodies  and  as
common  practices  evolve.  This  could  result  in  continuing  uncertainty  regarding  the  proper  design  and  assessment  of  internal  controls  over  financial
reporting and higher costs necessitated by ongoing revisions to internal controls.

We must continue to monitor and assess our internal control over financial reporting. If in the future we have any material weaknesses, we may not detect
errors  on  a  timely  basis  and  our  financial  statements  may  be  materially  misstated.  Additionally,  if  in  the  future  we  are  unable  to  comply  with  the
requirements  of  Section  404  of  the  Sarbanes-Oxley  Act  in  a  timely  manner,  are  unable  to  assert  that  our  internal  controls  over  financial  reporting  are
effective, identify material weaknesses in our internal controls over financial reporting, or if our independent registered public accounting firm is unable to
express an opinion as to the effectiveness of our internal controls over financial reporting, investors may lose confidence in the accuracy and completeness
of our financial reports, and the market price of our common stock could be adversely affected, and we could become subject to investigations by the stock
exchange on which our securities are listed, the SEC, or other regulatory authorities, which could require additional financial and management resources.

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Future litigation against us could be costly and time-consuming to defend and could result in additional liabilities.

We may from time to time be subject to legal proceedings and claims that arise in the ordinary course of business, such as claims brought by our customers
in connection with commercial disputes and employment claims made by our current or former employees. Claims may also be asserted by or on behalf of
a variety of other parties, including government agencies, patients or vendors of our customers, or stockholders. Any litigation involving us may result in
substantial costs, operationally restrict our business, and may divert management’s attention and resources, which may seriously harm our business, overall
financial condition, and results of operations. Insurance may not cover existing or future claims, be sufficient to fully compensate us for one or more of
such  claims,  or  continue  to  be  available  on  terms  acceptable  to  us.  A  claim  brought  against  us  that  is  uninsured  or  underinsured  could  result  in
unanticipated costs, thereby reducing our results of operations and resulting in a reduction in the trading price of our stock.

Changes in accounting principles may cause previously unanticipated fluctuations in our financial results, and the implementation of such changes
may impact our ability to meet our financial reporting obligations.

We prepare our financial statements in accordance with U.S. GAAP which are subject to interpretation or changes by the Financial Accounting Standards
Board (FASB), the SEC, and other various bodies formed to promulgate and interpret appropriate accounting principles. New accounting pronouncements
and changes in accounting principles have occurred in the past and are expected to occur in the future which may have a significant effect on our financial
results. Furthermore, any difficulties in implementation of changes in accounting principles, including the ability to modify our accounting systems, could
cause us to fail to meet our financial reporting obligations, which could result in regulatory discipline and harm investors’ confidence in us.

Economic uncertainties or downturns in the general economy or the industries in which our customers operate could disproportionately affect the
demand for our Solution and negatively impact our results of operations.

General worldwide economic conditions have experienced significant downturns during the last ten or more years, and market volatility and uncertainty
remain  widespread,  making  it  potentially  very  difficult  for  our  customers  and  us  to  accurately  forecast  and  plan  future  business  activities.  During
challenging economic times, our customers may have difficulty gaining timely access to sufficient credit or obtaining credit on reasonable terms, which
could impair their ability to make timely payments to us and adversely affect our revenue.

If that were to occur, our financial results could be harmed. Further, challenging economic conditions may impair the ability of our customers to pay for the
applications and services they already have purchased from us and, as a result, our write-offs of accounts receivable could increase. We cannot predict the
timing, strength, or duration of any economic slowdown or recovery. If the condition of the general economy or markets in which we operate worsens, our
business could be harmed.

We may acquire other companies or technologies, which could divert our management’s attention, result in dilution to our stockholders, and otherwise
disrupt our operations and we may have difficulty integrating any such acquisitions successfully or realizing the anticipated benefits therefrom, any of
which could have an adverse effect on our business, financial condition, and results of operations.

We  may  seek  to  acquire  or  invest  in  businesses,  applications,  and  services,  or  technologies  that  we  believe  could  complement  or  expand  our  Solution,
enhance our technical capabilities, or otherwise offer growth opportunities. The pursuit of potential acquisitions may divert the attention of management
and cause us to incur various expenses in identifying, investigating, and pursuing suitable acquisitions, whether or not they are consummated. We have in
the past and may in the future have difficulty integrating acquired businesses. For example, in June 2018 we acquired the interoperability services of the
Medicity business and during 2020 we acquired Able Health, Healthfinch, and Vitalware, all of which we are in the process of integrating with our other
services. We may have difficulty cross-selling our Solution to acquired customers, and we may have difficulty integrating, or incur integration-related costs
associated with, newly acquired team members.

We  have  limited  experience  in  acquiring  other  businesses.  If  we  acquire  additional  businesses,  we  may  not  be  able  to  integrate  the  acquired  personnel,
operations, and technologies successfully, or effectively manage the combined business following the acquisition. We also may not achieve the anticipated
benefits from the acquired business due to a number of factors, including, but not limited to:

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inability to integrate or benefit from acquired technologies or services in a profitable manner;

unanticipated costs or liabilities associated with the acquisition;

difficulty integrating the accounting systems, operations, and personnel of the acquired business;

difficulties and additional expenses associated with supporting legacy products and hosting infrastructure of the acquired business;

difficulty converting the customers of the acquired business onto our platform and contract terms, including disparities in the revenue, licensing,
support, or professional services model of the acquired company;

diversion of management’s attention from other business concerns;

adverse effects on our existing business relationships with business partners and customers as a result of the acquisition;

the potential loss of key employees;

use of resources that are needed in other parts of our business; and

use of substantial portions of our available cash to consummate the acquisition.

In addition, a significant portion of the purchase price of companies we acquire may be allocated to acquired goodwill and other intangible assets, which
must be assessed for impairment at least annually. In the future, if our acquisitions do not yield expected returns, we may be required to take charges to our
results of operations based on this impairment assessment process, which could adversely affect our results of operations.

Acquisitions could also result in dilutive issuances of equity securities or the incurrence of debt, which could adversely affect our results of operations. In
addition, if an acquired business fails to meet our expectations, our business, financial condition, and results of operations may suffer.

Also, the anticipated benefit of any acquisition may not materialize or may be prohibited by contractual obligations we may enter into in the future with
lenders  or  other  third  parties.  Additionally,  future  acquisitions  or  dispositions  could  result  in  potentially  dilutive  issuances  of  our  equity  securities,  the
incurrence of debt, contingent liabilities, or amortization expenses or write-offs of goodwill, any of which could harm our financial condition. We cannot
predict the number, timing or size of future acquisitions, or the effect that any such transactions might have on our results of operations.

Because competition for our target employees is intense, we may not be able to attract and retain the highly skilled employees we need to support our
continued growth.

To continue to execute on our growth plan, we must attract and retain highly qualified personnel. Competition for such personnel is intense, especially for
senior  sales  executives  and  software  engineers  with  high  levels  of  experience  in  designing  and  developing  applications  and  consulting  and  analytics
services. We may not be successful in attracting and retaining qualified personnel. We have from time to time in the past experienced, and we expect to
continue to experience in the future, difficulty in hiring and retaining highly skilled employees with appropriate qualifications. In addition, our search for
replacements  for  departed  employees  may  cause  uncertainty  regarding  the  future  of  our  business,  impact  employee  hiring  and  retention,  and  adversely
impact our revenue, results of operations, and financial condition. Many of the companies with which we compete for experienced personnel have greater
resources  than  we  have.  In  addition,  in  making  employment  decisions,  particularly  in  the  Internet  and  high-technology  industries,  job  candidates  often
consider  the  value  of  the  equity  awards  they  may  receive  in  connection  with  their  employment.  Volatility  in  the  price  of  our  stock  or  failure  to  obtain
stockholder approval for increases in the number of shares available for grant under our equity plans may, therefore, adversely affect our ability to attract or
retain key employees. If we fail to attract new personnel or fail to retain and motivate our current personnel, our business and future growth prospects could
be severely harmed.

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We depend on our senior management team, and the loss of one or more of our executive officers or key employees or an inability to attract and retain
highly skilled employees could adversely affect our business.

Our success depends largely upon the continued services of our key executive officers and recruitment of additional highly skilled employees. From time to
time, there may be changes in our senior management team resulting from the hiring or departure of executives, which could disrupt our business. Several
of  our  senior  leaders  are  active  members  of  the  Church  of  Jesus  Christ  of  Latter-Day  Saints.  There  is  a  risk  that  in  the  future,  one  or  more  of  these
individuals could receive a call to serve in a full-time capacity for the church. This has already occurred with one of the two co-founders of our company,
Steven Barlow, who in November 2016 was called to serve from June 2017 to June 2020 in a full-time capacity. At the time of his call, he was serving as
the President of our professional services organization and was one of the most senior leaders of our company. In connection with this call to serve, Mr.
Barlow took a leave-of-absence from his company responsibilities in March 2017 and returned from his leave of absence in August 2020. Hiring executives
with needed skills or the replacement of one or more of our executive officers or other key employees would likely involve significant time and costs and
may significantly delay or prevent the achievement of our business objectives.

In addition, competition for qualified management in our industry is intense. Many of the companies with which we compete for management personnel
have greater financial and other resources than we do. We have not entered into term-based employment agreements with our executive officers. All of our
employees are “at-will” employees, and their employment can be terminated by us or them at any time, for any reason. The departure of key personnel
could adversely affect the conduct of our business. In such event, we would be required to hire other personnel to manage and operate our business, and
there can be no assurance that we would be able to employ a suitable replacement for the departing individual, or that a replacement could be hired on
terms that are favorable to us. In addition, volatility or lack of performance in our stock price may affect our ability to attract replacements should key
personnel depart. If we are not able to retain any of our key management personnel, our business could be harmed.

Our corporate culture has contributed to our success, and if we cannot maintain this culture as we grow, we could lose the innovation, creativity, and
teamwork fostered by our culture, which could harm our business.

We believe that our corporate culture has been an important contributor to our success, which we believe fosters innovation, teamwork, and passion for
providing high levels of customer satisfaction. Most of our employees have been with us for fewer than three years as a result of our rapid growth. As we
continue  to  grow,  we  must  effectively  integrate,  develop,  and  motivate  a  growing  number  of  new  employees.  As  a  result,  we  may  find  it  difficult  to
maintain our corporate culture, which could limit our ability to innovate and operate effectively. Any failure to preserve our culture could also negatively
affect our ability to retain and recruit personnel, maintain our performance, or execute on our business strategy.

If we fail to effectively manage our growth and organizational change, our business and results of operations could be harmed.

We have experienced, and may continue to experience, rapid growth and organizational change, which has placed, and may continue to place, significant
demands on our management, operational, and financial resources. In addition, if we fail to successfully integrate new team members, it could harm our
culture.  We  must  continue  to  maintain,  and  may  need  to  enhance,  our  information  technology  infrastructure  and  financial  and  accounting  systems  and
controls,  as  well  as  manage  expanded  operations  in  geographically  distributed  locations,  which  will  place  additional  demands  on  our  resources  and
operations. We also must attract, train, and retain a significant number of qualified sales and marketing personnel, professional services personnel, software
engineers, technical personnel, service offering personnel, and management personnel. This will require us to invest in and commit significant financial,
operational, and management resources to grow and change in these areas without undermining the corporate culture that has been critical to our growth so
far. If we do not achieve the benefits anticipated from these investments, or if the realization of these benefits is delayed, our results of operations may be
adversely affected. If we fail to provide effective customer training on our Solution and high-quality customer support, our business and reputation could
suffer.  Failure  to  manage  our  growth  effectively  could  lead  us  to  over-invest  or  under-invest  in  technology  and  operations;  result  in  weaknesses  in  our
infrastructure,  systems,  or  controls;  give  rise  to  operational  mistakes,  losses,  or  loss  of  productivity  or  business  opportunities;  reduce  customer  or  user
satisfaction; limit our ability to respond to competitive pressures; and result in loss of team members and reduced productivity of remaining team members.
Our growth could require significant capital expenditures and may divert financial resources and management attention from other projects, such as the
development of new or enhanced services or the acquisition of suitable businesses or technologies. If our management is unable to effectively manage our
growth,  our  expenses  may  increase  more  than  expected,  our  revenue  could  decline  or  may  grow  more  slowly  than  expected,  and  we  may  be  unable  to
implement our business strategy.

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We may not grow at the rates we historically have achieved or at all, even if our key metrics may indicate growth.

We have experienced significant growth in the last five years. Future revenue may not grow at these same rates or may decline. Our future growth will
depend, in part, on our ability to grow our revenue from existing customers, to complete sales to potential future customers, to expand our customer and
member  bases,  to  develop  new  solutions,  and  to  expand  internationally.  We  can  provide  no  assurances  that  we  will  be  successful  in  executing  on  these
growth strategies or that we will continue to grow our revenue or to generate net income. Our historical results may not be indicative of future performance.
Our ability to execute on our existing sales pipeline, create additional sales pipelines, and expand our customer base depends on, among other things, the
attractiveness of our Solution relative to those offered by our competitors, our ability to demonstrate the value of our existing and future services, and our
ability to attract and retain a sufficient number of qualified sales and marketing leadership and support personnel. In addition, our existing customers may
be slower to adopt our Solution than we currently anticipate, which could adversely affect our results of operations and growth prospects.

The estimates of market opportunity and forecasts of market growth included herein may prove to be inaccurate, and even if the markets in which we
compete achieve the forecasted growth, our business may not grow at similar rates, or at all.

Market opportunity estimates and growth forecasts included herein are subject to significant uncertainty and are based on assumptions and estimates which
may not prove to be accurate. The estimates and forecasts included herein relating to the size and expected growth of our target market may prove to be
inaccurate. Even if the markets in which we compete meet the size estimates and growth forecasts included herein, our business may not grow at similar
rates, or at all. Our growth is subject to many factors, including our success in implementing our business strategy, which is subject to many risks and
uncertainties.

Risks Related to Data and Intellectual Property

Our Solution is dependent on our ability to source data from third parties, and such third parties could take steps to block our access to data, which
could impair our ability to provide our Solution or limit the effectiveness of our Solution.

Our  data  platform  requires  us  to  source  data  from  multiple  clinical,  financial,  and  operational  data  sources,  which  sources  are  also  typically  third-party
vendors of our customers. The functioning of our analytics applications and our ability to perform analytics services is predicated on our ability to establish
interfaces that download the relevant data from these source systems on a repeated basis and in a reliable manner. We may encounter vendors that engage in
information blocking practices that may inhibit our ability to access the relevant data on behalf of customers. Further, on May 1, 2020, ONC and CMS
finalized and published complementary new rules to support access, exchange, and use of EHI, referred to as the Final Rule. The Final Rule is intended to
clarify provisions of the 21st Century Cures Act regarding interoperability and information blocking, and, subject to the interpretations of the Final Rule,
and  exceptions  to  what  constitutes  information  blocking,  may  create  significant  new  requirements  for  healthcare  industry  participants.  The  Final  Rule
requires certain electronic health record technology to incorporate standardized application programming interfaces (APIs) to allow individuals to securely
and easily access structured EHI using smartphone applications. The Final Rule also implements provisions of the 21st Century Cures Act requiring that
patients be provided with electronic access to all of their EHI (structured and/or unstructured) at no cost.

Finally,  the  Final  Rule  also  implements  the  information  blocking  provisions  of  the  21st  Century  Cures  Act,  subject  to  eight  exceptions  that  will  not  be
considered information blocking as long as specific conditions are met. The impact of the Final Rule on our business is unclear at this time, due to, among
other things, uncertainty regarding the interpretation of safe harbors and exceptions to the Final Rule by industry participants and regulators.

The Final Rule focuses on health plans, payors, and healthcare providers and proposes measures to enable patients to move from health plan to health plan,
provider to provider, and have both their clinical and administrative information travel with them. It is unclear whether the Final Rule may benefit us in that
certain  EHR  vendors  will  no  longer  be  permitted  to  interfere  with  our  attempts  at  integration,  but  the  rules  may  also  make  it  easier  for  other  similar
companies to enter the market, creating increased competition, and reducing our market share. It is unclear at this time what the costs of compliance with
the  proposed  rules,  if  adopted,  would  be,  and  what  additional  risks  there  may  be  to  our  business.  If  we  face  limitations  on  the  development  of  data
interfaces and other information blocking practices, our data access and ability to download relevant data may be limited, which could adversely affect our
ability to provide our Solution as effectively as possible. Any steps we take to enforce the anti-information blocking provisions of the 21st Century Cures
Act could be costly, could distract management attention from the business, and could have uncertain results.

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Failure by our customers to obtain proper permissions and waivers may result in claims against us or may limit or prevent our use of data, which could
harm our business.

We require our customers to provide necessary notices and to obtain necessary permissions and waivers for use and disclosure of the information that we
receive, and we require contractual assurances from them that they have done so and will do so. If they do not obtain necessary permissions and waivers,
then our use and disclosure of information that we receive from them or on their behalf may be restricted or prohibited by state, federal or international
privacy or data protection laws, or other related privacy and data protection laws. This could impair our functions, processes, and databases that reflect,
contain, or are based upon such data and may prevent the use of such data, including our ability to provide such data to third parties that are incorporated
into our service offerings. Furthermore, this may cause us to breach obligations to third parties to whom we may provide such data, such as third-party
service or technology providers that are incorporated into our service offerings. In addition, this could interfere with or prevent data sourcing, data analyses,
or limit other data-driven activities that benefit us. Moreover, we may be subject to claims, civil and/or criminal liability or government or state attorneys
general investigations for use or disclosure of information by reason of lack of valid notice, permission, or waiver. These claims, liabilities or government
or state attorneys general investigations could subject us to unexpected costs and adversely affect our financial condition and results of operations.

If our security measures are breached or unauthorized access to customer data is otherwise obtained, our Solution may be perceived as not being
secure, customers may reduce the use of or stop using our Solution, and we may incur significant liabilities.

Our  Solution  involves  the  storage  and  transmission  of  our  customers’  proprietary  information,  including  personal  or  identifying  information  regarding
patients and their PHI. Despite the implementation of security measures, our internal computer systems and those of our customers, contractors, consultants
and collaborators are vulnerable to damage from cyberattacks, “phishing” attacks, computer viruses, unauthorized access, natural disasters, terrorism, war
and  telecommunication  and  electrical  failures.  Attacks  upon  information  technology  systems  are  increasing  in  their  frequency,  levels  of  persistence,
sophistication and intensity, and are being conducted by sophisticated and organized groups and individuals with a wide range of motives and expertise. As
a  result  of  the  COVID-19  pandemic,  we  may  also  face  increased  cybersecurity  risks  due  to  our  reliance  on  internet  technology  and  the  number  of  our
employees who are working remotely, which may create additional opportunities for cybercriminals to exploit vulnerabilities. Because the techniques used
to obtain unauthorized access or sabotage systems change frequently and generally are not identified until they are launched against a target, we may be
unable  to  anticipate  these  techniques  or  to  implement  adequate  preventative  measures.  We  may  also  experience  security  breaches  that  may  remain
undetected  for  an  extended  period.  Moreover,  the  detection,  prevention,  and  remediation  of  known  or  unknown  security  vulnerabilities,  including  those
arising from third-party hardware or software, may result in additional direct or indirect costs and management time. As a result, unauthorized access or
security breaches as a result of third-party action, employee error, malfeasance, or otherwise could result in the loss or inappropriate use of information,
litigation, indemnity obligations, damage to our reputation, and other liability such as government or state Attorney General investigations.

Any or all of these issues could adversely affect our ability to attract new customers, cause existing customers to elect to not renew their subscriptions,
result  in  reputational  damage,  or  subject  us  to  third-party  lawsuits,  regulatory  fines,  mandatory  disclosures,  or  other  action  or  liability,  which  could
adversely affect our results of operations. Our general liability insurance may not be adequate to cover all potential claims to which we are exposed and
may not be adequate to indemnify us for liability that may be imposed or the losses associated with such events, and in any case, such insurance may not
cover  all  of  the  specific  costs,  expenses,  and  losses  we  could  incur  in  responding  to  and  remediating  a  security  breach.  A  security  breach  of  another
significant provider of cloud-based solutions may also negatively impact the demand for our Solution.

We rely on third-party providers, including Microsoft Azure, for computing infrastructure, network connectivity, and other technology-related services
needed to deliver our Solution. Any disruption in the services provided by such third-party providers could adversely affect our business and subject us
to liability.

Our DOS platform and analytics applications are hosted from and use computing infrastructure provided by third parties, including Microsoft Azure and
Flexential, and other computing infrastructure service providers. We have migrated and expect to continue to migrate a significant portion of our computing
infrastructure needs to Microsoft Azure. We have made and expect to continue to make substantial investments in transitioning customers from our own
managed  data  center  to  Microsoft  Azure.  We  anticipate  that  this  transition  will  increase  the  cost  of  hosting  our  technology  and  negatively  impact  our
technology gross margin. We currently expect our planned transitions to be substantially complete by the end of 2022. Such migrations are risky and may
cause  disruptions  to  our  Solution,  service  outages,  downtime,  or  other  problems  and  may  increase  our  costs.  Despite  precautions  taken  during  such
transitions, any unsuccessful transition of technology may impair customers’ use of our technology which may cause greater costs or downtime and which
may lead to, among other things, customer dissatisfaction and non-renewals.

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Our computing infrastructure service providers have no obligation to renew their agreements with us on commercially reasonable terms or at all. If we are
unable to renew these agreements on commercially reasonable terms, or if one of our computing infrastructure service providers is acquired, we may be
required to transition to a new provider and we may incur significant costs and possible service interruption in connection with doing so.

Problems  faced  by  our  computing  infrastructure  service  providers,  including  those  operated  by  Microsoft,  could  adversely  affect  the  experience  of  our
customers. Microsoft Azure has also had and may in the future experience significant service outages.
Additionally, if our computing infrastructure service providers are unable to keep up with our growing needs for capacity, this could have an adverse effect
on  our  business.  For  example,  a  rapid  expansion  of  our  business  could  affect  our  service  levels  or  cause  our  third-party  hosted  systems  to  fail.  Our
agreements with third-party computing infrastructure service providers may not entitle us to service level credits that correspond with those we offer to our
customers.

Any changes in third-party service levels at our computing infrastructure service providers, or any related disruptions or performance problems with our
Solution,  could  adversely  affect  our  reputation  and  may  damage  our  customers’  stored  files,  result  in  lengthy  interruptions  in  our  services,  or  result  in
potential losses of customer data. Interruptions in our services might reduce our revenue, cause us to issue refunds to customers for prepaid and unused
subscriptions, subject us to service level credit claims and potential liability, allow our customers to terminate their contracts with us, or adversely affect
our renewal rates.

We rely on Internet infrastructure, bandwidth providers, data center providers, other third parties, and our own systems for providing services to our
users, and any failure or interruption in the services provided by these third parties or our own systems could expose us to litigation, potentially require
us to issue credits to our customers, and negatively impact our relationships with users or customers, adversely affecting our brand and our business.

In  addition  to  the  services  we  provide  from  our  offices,  we  serve  our  customers  primarily  from  third-party  data-hosting  facilities.  These  facilities  are
vulnerable to damage or interruption from earthquakes, floods, fires, power loss, telecommunications failures, and similar events. They are also subject to
break-ins,  sabotage,  intentional  acts  of  vandalism,  and  similar  misconduct.  Their  systems  and  servers  could  also  be  subject  to  hacking,  spamming,
ransomware,  computer  viruses  or  other  malicious  software,  denial  of  service  attacks,  service  disruptions,  including  the  inability  to  process  certain
transactions, phishing attacks and unauthorized access attempts, including third parties gaining access to users’ accounts using stolen or inferred credentials
or other means, and may use such access to prevent use of users’ accounts. Despite precautions taken at these facilities, the occurrence of a natural disaster
or an act of terrorism, a decision to close the facilities without adequate notice, or other unanticipated problems at two or more of the facilities could result
in lengthy interruptions in our services. Even with our disaster recovery arrangements, our services could be interrupted.

Our ability to deliver our Internet- and telecommunications-based services is dependent on the development and maintenance of the infrastructure of the
Internet and other telecommunications services by third parties. This includes maintenance of a reliable network backbone with the necessary speed, data
capacity,  and  security  for  providing  reliable  Internet  access  and  services  and  reliable  mobile  device,  telephone,  facsimile,  and  pager  systems,  all  at  a
predictable and reasonable cost. We have experienced and expect that we will experience interruptions and delays in services and availability from time to
time.

We rely on internal systems as well as third-party vendors, including data center, bandwidth, and telecommunications equipment or service providers, to
provide our services. We do not maintain redundant systems or facilities for some of these services. In the event of a catastrophic event with respect to one
or more of these systems or facilities, we may experience an extended period of system unavailability, which could negatively impact our relationship with
users or customers. To operate without interruption, both we and our service providers must guard against:

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damage from fire, power loss, and other natural disasters;

communications failures;

software and hardware errors, failures, and crashes;

security breaches, computer viruses, ransomware, and similar disruptive problems; and

other potential interruptions.

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Any  disruption  in  the  network  access,  telecommunications,  or  co-location  services  provided  by  these  third-party  providers  or  any  failure  of  or  by  these
third-party providers or our own systems to handle the current or higher volume of use could significantly harm our business. We exercise limited control
over these third-party vendors, which increases our vulnerability to problems with the services they provide.

Any errors, failures, interruptions, or delays experienced in connection with these third-party technologies and information services or our own systems
could negatively impact our relationships with users and customers, adversely affect our brands and business, and expose us to third-party liabilities. The
insurance coverage under our policies may not be adequate to compensate us for all losses that may occur. In addition, we cannot provide assurance that we
will continue to be able to obtain adequate insurance coverage at an acceptable cost.

The reliability and performance of the Internet may be harmed by increased usage or by denial-of-service attacks. The Internet has experienced a variety of
outages and other delays as a result of damages to portions of its infrastructure, and it could face outages and delays in the future. These outages and delays
could reduce the level of Internet usage as well as the availability of the Internet to us for delivery of our Internet-based services.

We typically provide service level commitments under our customer contracts. If we fail to meet these contractual commitments, we could be obligated to
provide  credits  or  refunds  for  prepaid  amounts  related  to  unused  subscription  services  or  face  contract  terminations,  which  could  adversely  affect  our
results of operations.

Finally, recent changes in law could impact the cost and availability of necessary Internet infrastructure. Increased costs and/or decreased availability would
negatively affect our results of operations.

Our Solution utilizes open-source software, and any failure to comply with the terms of one or more of these open-source licenses could adversely
affect our business.

We use software modules licensed to us by third-party authors under “open-source” licenses in our Solution. Some open-source licenses contain affirmative
obligations  or  restrictive  terms  that  could  adversely  impact  our  business,  such  as  restrictions  on  commercialization  or  obligations  to  make  available
modified or derivative works of certain open-source code. If we were to combine our proprietary software with certain open-source software subject to
these licenses in a certain manner, we could, under certain open-source licenses, be required to release or otherwise make available the source code to our
proprietary  software  to  the  public.  This  would  allow  our  competitors  to  create  similar  products  with  lower  development  effort  and  time  and  ultimately
could result in a loss of product sales for us.

Although  we  employ  practices  designed  to  manage  our  compliance  with  open-source  licenses  and  protect  our  proprietary  source  code,  we  may
inadvertently use open-source software in a manner we do not intend and that could expose us to claims for breach of contract and intellectual property
infringement. If we are held to have breached the terms of an open-source software license, we could be required to, among other things, seek licenses from
third parties to continue offering our products on terms that are not economically feasible, pay damages to third parties, to re-engineer our products, to
discontinue the sale of our products if re-engineering cannot be accomplished on a timely basis, or to make generally available, in source code form, a
portion of our proprietary code, any of which could adversely affect our business, results of operations, and financial condition. The terms of many open-
source licenses have not been interpreted by U.S. courts, and, as a result, there is a risk that such licenses could be construed in a manner that imposes
unanticipated conditions or restrictions on our ability to commercialize our Solution.

We employ third-party licensed software and software components for use in or with our Solution, and the inability to maintain these licenses or the
presence of errors in the software we license could limit the functionality of our Solution and result in increased costs or reduced service levels, which
would adversely affect our business.

Our software applications might incorporate or interact with certain third-party software and software components (other than open-source software), such
as data visualization software, obtained under licenses from other companies. We pay these third parties a license fee or royalty payment. We anticipate that
we will continue to use such third-party software in the future. Although we believe that there are commercially reasonable alternatives to the third-party
software  we  currently  make  available,  this  may  not  always  be  the  case,  or  it  may  be  difficult  or  costly  to  replace.  Furthermore,  these  third  parties  may
increase  the  price  for  licensing  their  software,  which  could  negatively  impact  our  results  of  operations.  Our  use  of  additional  or  alternative  third-party
software could require customers to enter into license agreements with third parties. In addition, if the third-party software we make available has errors or
otherwise  malfunctions,  or  if  the  third-party  terminates  its  agreement  with  us,  the  functionality  of  our  Solution  may  be  negatively  impacted  and  our
business may suffer.

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Because we rely on a limited number of customers for a significant portion of our revenue, we depend on the creditworthiness of these customers. Our
customers are subject to a number of risks including reductions in payment rates from governmental payors, higher than expected healthcare costs, and lack
of predictability of financial results when entering new lines of business. If the financial condition of our customers declines, our credit risk could increase.
Should one or more of our significant customers declare bankruptcy, be declared insolvent, or otherwise be restricted by state or federal laws or regulation
from continuing in some or all of their operations, this could adversely affect our ongoing revenue, the collectability of our accounts receivable, and affect
our bad debt reserves and net income.

Any failure to protect our intellectual property rights could impair our ability to protect our proprietary technology and our brand.

Our  success  and  ability  to  compete  depend  in  part  upon  our  intellectual  property.  As  of  December  31,  2020,  we  had  filed  applications  for  a  number  of
patents, and we have eleven issued U.S., two issued Canadian patents, one issued Great Britain patent, and one issued European patent, as well as two
patent applications pending in the United States and two patent applications pending in Canada. We also had twenty-seven registered trademarks in the
United States, Canada, and China. We also rely on copyright and trademark laws, trade secret protection, and confidentiality or license agreements with our
employees, customers, partners, and others to protect our intellectual property rights. However, the steps we take to protect our intellectual property rights
may be inadequate. For example, other parties, including our competitors, may independently develop similar technology, duplicate our services, or design
around our intellectual property and, in such cases, we may not be able to assert our intellectual property rights against such parties. Further, our contractual
arrangements may not effectively prevent disclosure of our confidential information or provide an adequate remedy in the event of unauthorized disclosure
of  our  confidential  information,  and  we  may  be  unable  to  detect  the  unauthorized  use  of,  or  take  appropriate  steps  to  enforce,  our  intellectual  property
rights.

We  make  business  decisions  about  when  to  seek  patent  protection  for  a  particular  technology  and  when  to  rely  upon  trade  secret  protection,  and  the
approach we select may ultimately prove to be inadequate. Even in cases where we seek patent protection, there is no assurance that the resulting patents
will effectively protect every significant feature of our Solution, technology, or proprietary information, or provide us with any competitive advantages.
Moreover, we cannot guarantee that any of our pending patent applications will issue or be approved. The United States Patent and Trademark Office and
various foreign governmental patent agencies also require compliance with a number of procedural, documentary, fee payment, and other similar provisions
during the patent application process and after a patent has issued. There are situations in which noncompliance can result in abandonment or lapse of the
patent, or patent application, resulting in partial or complete loss of patent rights in the relevant jurisdiction. If this occurs, our competitors might be able to
enter the market, which would have a material adverse effect on our business. Effective trademark, copyright, patent, and trade secret protection may not be
available  in  every  country  in  which  we  conduct  business.  Further,  intellectual  property  law,  including  statutory  and  case  law,  particularly  in  the  United
States, is constantly developing, and any changes in the law could make it harder for us to enforce our rights.

In order to protect our intellectual property rights, we may be required to spend significant resources to monitor and protect these rights. Litigation brought
to protect and enforce our intellectual property rights could be costly, time-consuming, and distracting to management and could result in the impairment or
loss of portions of our intellectual property. Furthermore, our efforts to enforce our intellectual property rights may be met with defenses, counterclaims,
and countersuits attacking the validity and enforceability of our intellectual property rights.

An adverse determination of any litigation proceedings could put our intellectual property at risk of being invalidated or interpreted narrowly and could put
our  related  pending  patent  applications  at  risk  of  not  issuing.  Furthermore,  because  of  the  substantial  amount  of  discovery  required  in  connection  with
intellectual property litigation, there is a risk that some of our confidential or sensitive information could be compromised by disclosure in the event of
litigation. In addition, during the course of litigation, there could be public announcements of the results of hearings, motions or other interim proceedings
or  developments.  If  securities  analysts  or  investors  perceive  these  results  to  be  negative,  it  could  have  a  substantial  adverse  effect  on  the  price  of  our
common stock. Negative publicity related to a decision by us to initiate such enforcement actions against a customer or former customer, regardless of its
accuracy, may adversely impact our other customer relationships or prospective customer relationships, harm our brand and business, and could cause the
market price of our common stock to decline. Our failure to secure, protect, and enforce our intellectual property rights could adversely affect our brand
and our business.

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We may be sued by third parties for alleged infringement of their proprietary rights or misappropriation of intellectual property.

There is considerable patent and other intellectual property development activity in our industry. Our future success depends in part on not infringing upon
the intellectual property rights of others. Our competitors, as well as a number of other entities and individuals, including so-called non-practicing entities
(NPEs), may own or claim to own intellectual property relating to our Solution. From time to time, third parties may claim that we are infringing upon their
intellectual property rights or that we have misappropriated their intellectual property. For example, in some cases, very broad patents are granted that may
be  interpreted  as  covering  a  wide  field  of  healthcare  data  storage  and  analytics  solutions  or  machine  learning  and  predictive  modeling  methods  in
healthcare.  As  competition  in  our  market  grows,  the  possibility  of  patent  infringement,  trademark  infringement,  and  other  intellectual  property  claims
against  us  increases.  In  the  future,  we  expect  others  to  claim  that  our  Solution  and  underlying  technology  infringe  or  violate  their  intellectual  property
rights. In a patent infringement claim against us, we may assert, as a defense, that we do not infringe the relevant patent claims, that the patent is invalid or
both. The strength of our defenses will depend on the patents asserted, the interpretation of these patents, and our ability to invalidate the asserted patents.
However, we could be unsuccessful in advancing non-infringement and/or invalidity arguments in our defense. In the United States, issued patents enjoy a
presumption of validity, and the party challenging the validity of a patent claim must present clear and convincing evidence of invalidity, which is a high
burden of proof. Conversely, the patent owner need only prove infringement by a preponderance of the evidence, which is a lower burden of proof.

We may be unaware of the intellectual property rights that others may claim cover some or all of our technology or services. Because patent applications
can take years to issue and are often afforded confidentiality for some period of time there may currently be pending applications, unknown to us, that later
result in issued patents that could cover one or more aspects of our technology and services. Any claims or litigation could cause us to incur significant
expenses  and,  whether  or  not  successfully  asserted  against  us,  could  require  that  we  pay  substantial  damages,  ongoing  royalty  or  license  payments,  or
settlement fees, prevent us from offering our Solution or using certain technologies, require us to re-engineer all or a portion of our platform, or require that
we comply with other unfavorable terms. We may also be obligated to indemnify our customers or business partners or pay substantial settlement costs,
including  royalty  payments,  in  connection  with  any  such  claim  or  litigation  and  to  obtain  licenses,  modify  applications,  or  refund  fees,  which  could  be
costly. Even if we were to prevail in such a dispute, any litigation regarding our intellectual property could be costly and time-consuming and divert the
attention of our management and key personnel from our business operations.

Risks Related to Governmental Regulation

Risks Related to Healthcare and Data Privacy and Security Regulation

Actual or perceived failures to comply with applicable data protection, privacy and security laws, regulations, standards and other requirements could
adversely affect our business, results of operations, and financial condition.

• Health Information Privacy and Security Laws. There are numerous federal and state laws and regulations that govern the privacy and security of
health information. In particular, HIPAA imposes, among other things, certain standards relating to the privacy, security, transmission and breach
reporting of protected health information (PHI) . By processing and maintaining PHI on behalf of our covered entity customers, we are a HIPAA
business associate and are required to enter into BAAs with our covered entity clients to safeguard PHI, as well as BAAs with our subcontractors
that access or otherwise process PHI on our behalf.

We  may  not  be  able  to  adequately  address  the  business  risks  created  by  HIPAA  implementation.  Furthermore,  we  are  unable  to  predict  what
changes  to  HIPAA  or  other  laws  or  regulations  might  be  made  in  the  future  or  how  those  changes  could  affect  our  business  or  the  costs  of
compliance.  We  are  unable  to  predict  what,  if  any,  impact  the  changes  in  such  standards  will  have  on  our  compliance  costs  or  our  Solution.
Penalties  for  failure  to  comply  with  a  requirement  of  HIPAA  vary  significantly  depending  on  the  nature  of  violation  and  could  include  civil
monetary or criminal penalties. HIPAA also authorizes state attorneys general to file suit under HIPAA on behalf of state residents. Courts can
award  damages,  costs  and  attorneys’  fees  related  to  violations  of  HIPAA  in  such  cases.  While  HIPAA  does  not  create  a  private  right  of  action
allowing individuals to sue us in civil court for HIPAA violations, its standards have been used as the basis for a duty of care claim in state civil
suits such as those for negligence or recklessness in the misuse or breach of PHI. Certain states have also adopted privacy and security laws and
regulations, some of which may be more stringent than HIPAA. Such laws and regulations will be subject to interpretation by various courts and
other governmental authorities, thus creating potentially complex compliance issues for us and our future customers and strategic partners.

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Some of our analytics applications, for example one of our benchmarking applications, require that we obtain permissions consistent with HIPAA
to provide “data aggregation services” and the right to create de-identified information and to use and disclose such de-identified information. We
will also require large sets of de-identified information to enable us to continue to develop machine learning algorithms that enhance our Solution.
If we are unable to secure these rights in customer BAAs or as a result of any future changes to HIPAA or other applicable laws, we may face
limitations  on  the  use  of  PHI  and  our  ability  to  use  de-identified  information  that  could  negatively  affect  the  scope  of  our  Solution  as  well  as
impair our ability to provide upgrades and enhancements to our Solution.

We outsource important aspects of the storage and transmission of customer and member information, and thus rely on third parties to manage
functions that have material cyber‑security risks. We attempt to address these risks by requiring outsourcing subcontractors who handle customer
information to sign BAAs contractually requiring those subcontractors to adequately safeguard PHI in a similar manner that applies to us and in
some cases by requiring such outsourcing subcontractors to undergo third‑party security examinations as well as to protect the confidentiality of
other  sensitive  customer  information.  In  addition,  we  periodically  hire  third‑party  security  experts  to  assess  and  test  our  security  measures.
However, we cannot be assured that these contractual measures and other safeguards will adequately protect us from the risks associated with the
storage and transmission of customer proprietary information and PHI.

•

Consumer  Protection  Regulation.  Federal  and  state  government  bodies  and  agencies  have  adopted  or  are  considering  adopting  laws  and
regulations regarding the collection, use, and dissemination of data, and the presentation of website or other electronic content, which may require
compliance  with  certain  standards  for  notice,  choice,  security,  and  access.  California  adopted  the  CCPA,  which  went  into  effect  on  January  1,
2020.  The  CCPA  establishes  a  new  privacy  framework  for  covered  businesses  by  creating  an  expanded  definition  of  personal  information,
establishing  new  data  privacy  rights  for  consumers  in  the  state  of  California,  imposing  special  rules  on  the  collection  of  consumer  data  from
minors,  and  creating  a  new  and  potentially  severe  statutory  damages  framework  for  violations  of  the  CCPA  and  for  businesses  that  fail  to
implement  reasonable  security  procedures  and  practices  to  prevent  data  breaches.  Additionally,  the  CPRA  recently  passed  in  California.  The
CPRA  will  impose  additional  data  protection  obligations  on  companies  doing  business  in  California,  including  additional  consumer  rights
processes, limitations on data uses, new audit requirements for higher risk data, and opt outs for certain uses of sensitive data. It will also create a
new California data protection agency authorized to issue substantive regulations and could result in increased privacy and information security
enforcement. The majority of the provisions will go into effect on January 1, 2023, and additional compliance investment and potential business
process  changes  may  be  required.  If  we  fail  to  comply  with  any  of  these  privacy  laws  that  apply  to  us,  and  are  subject  to  the  aforementioned
penalties, our business and financial results could be adversely affected.

• GDPR and Foreign Data Privacy Protection Laws. In addition, many foreign governments have established or are in the process of establishing
privacy and data security legal frameworks governing the collection, use and disclosure of personal information obtained from their residents. For
example, in the European Union (EU), the GDPR went into effect on May 25, 2018. If we or our vendors fail to comply with the applicable EU
privacy laws, we could be subject to government enforcement actions and significant penalties against us. GDPR introduced new data protection
requirements in the EU relating to the consent of the individuals to whom the personal data relates, the information provided to the individuals, the
documentation we must retain, the security and confidentiality of the personal data, data breach notification and the use of third-party processors
in connection with the processing of personal data. GDPR has increased our responsibility and potential liability in relation to personal data that
we process, and we may be required to put in place mechanisms to ensure compliance with GDPR. In addition, the GDPR increases the scrutiny of
transfers of personal data from the EEA to the United States and other jurisdictions that the European Commission does not recognize as having
“adequate”  data  protection  laws;  in  July  2020,  the  Court  of  Justice  of  the  European  Union  limited  how  organizations  could  lawfully  transfer
personal data from the EEA to the United States by invalidating the EU-US Privacy Shield and imposing further restrictions on use of the standard
contractual clauses, which could increase our costs and our ability to efficiently process personal data from the EEA. Data protection authorities of
the different EU member states may also interpret GDPR differently, and guidance on implementation and compliance practices are often updated
or otherwise revised, which adds to the complexity of processing personal data in the EU. Any failure by us to comply with GDPR could result in
proceedings or actions against us by governmental entities or others, which may subject us to significant penalties and negative publicity, require
us to change our business practices, and increase our costs and severely disrupt our business. From January 1, 2021, we may be subject to the
GDPR and also the UK GDPR, which, together with the amended UK Data Protection Act 2018, retains the GDPR in UK national law. The UK
GDPR mirrors the fines under the GDPR, e.g. fines up to the greater of €20 million (£17.5 million) or 4% of global turnover.

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The relationship between the United Kingdom and the European Union in relation to certain aspects of data protection law remains unclear, and it
is unclear how UK data protection laws and regulations will develop in the medium to longer term, and how data transfers to and from the UK will
be regulated in the long term. Currently there is a four to six-month grace period agreed in the EU and UK Trade and Cooperation Agreement,
ending  June  30,  2021  at  the  latest,  while  the  parties  discuss  an  adequacy  decision.  However,  it  is  not  clear  whether  (and  when)  an  adequacy
decision may be granted by the European Commission enabling data transfers from EU member states to the UK long term without additional
measures. These changes may lead to additional costs and increase our overall risk exposure

•

Canadian  Data  Privacy  Protection  Laws.  Similarly,  Canada’s  Personal  Information  and  Protection  of  Electronic  Documents  Act  provides
Canadian residents with privacy protections in regard to transactions with businesses and organizations in the private sector and sets out ground
rules  for  how  private-sector  organizations  may  collect,  use,  and  disclose  personal  information  in  the  course  of  commercial  activities.  Foreign
governments may attempt to apply such laws extraterritorially or through treaties or other arrangements with U.S. governmental entities. Other
jurisdictions besides the EU and Canada are similarly introducing or enhancing laws and regulations relating to privacy and data security, which
enhances  risks  relating  to  compliance  with  such  laws.  Furthermore,  as  we  enter  into  business  arrangements  in  countries  outside  of  the  United
States, we will need to be prepared to comply with applicable local privacy laws. The GDPR and other changes in laws or regulations associated
with the enhanced protection of certain types of personal data, such as healthcare data or other sensitive information, could greatly increase our
cost of providing our products and services or even prevent us from offering certain services in jurisdictions that we operate.

We cannot be certain that the privacy policies and other statements regarding our practices will be found sufficient to protect us from liability or adverse
publicity relating to the privacy and security of personal information. There is ongoing concern from privacy advocates, regulators, and others regarding
data  protection  and  privacy  issues,  and  the  number  of  jurisdictions  with  data  protection  and  privacy  laws  has  been  increasing.  Also,  there  are  ongoing
public policy discussions regarding whether the standards for de-identified, anonymous, or pseudonymized health information are sufficient, and the risk of
re-identification  sufficiently  small,  to  adequately  protect  patient  privacy.  We  expect  that  there  will  continue  to  be  new  proposed  laws,  regulations,  and
industry standards concerning privacy, data protection, and information security in the United States, including the CCPA, and we cannot yet determine the
impact  such  laws,  regulations,  and  standards  may  have  on  our  business.  Future  laws,  regulations,  standards,  and  other  obligations,  and  changes  in  the
interpretation  of  existing  laws,  regulations,  standards,  and  other  obligations  could  impair  our  or  our  customers’  ability  to  collect,  use,  or  disclose
information relating to consumers, which could decrease demand for our Solutions, increase our costs, and impair our ability to maintain and grow our
customer base and increase our revenue. Any failure or perceived failure by us to comply with international, federal or state laws or regulations, industry
standards, or other legal obligations, or any actual or suspected security incident, whether or not resulting in unauthorized access to, or acquisition, release,
or transfer of personally identifiable information or other data, may result in governmental enforcement actions and prosecutions, private litigation, fines,
and penalties or adverse publicity and could cause our customers to lose trust in us, which could have an adverse effect on our reputation and business. We
may be unable to make such changes and modifications in a commercially reasonable manner or at all, and our ability to develop new products and features
could be limited. Any of these developments could harm our business, financial condition, and results of operations. Privacy and data security concerns,
whether valid or not valid, may inhibit market adoption of our platform.

Government regulation of healthcare creates risks and challenges with respect to our compliance efforts and our business strategies.

Many healthcare laws are complex, and their application to specific services and relationships may not be clear. In particular, many existing healthcare laws
and  regulations,  when  enacted,  did  not  anticipate  the  data  analytics  and  improvement  services  that  we  provide,  and  these  laws  and  regulations  may  be
applied  to  our  Solution  in  ways  that  we  do  not  anticipate,  particularly  as  we  develop  and  release  new  and  more  sophisticated  solutions.  Our  failure  to
accurately anticipate the application of these laws and regulations, or our other failure to comply with them, could create significant liability for us, result in
adverse publicity, and negatively affect our business. Some of the risks we face or may face from healthcare regulation are described below.

The federal Anti-Kickback Statute prohibits, among other things, the offering, paying, soliciting, or receiving anything of value, directly or indirectly, for
the  referral  of  patients  covered  by  Medicare,  Medicaid,  and  other  federal  healthcare  programs  or  the  leasing,  purchasing,  ordering,  or  arranging  for  or
recommending the lease, purchase, or order of any item, good, facility, or service covered by these programs. A person or entity does not need to have
actual knowledge of the statute or specific intent to violate it in order to have committed a violation. Some enforcement activities focus on below or above
market payments for federally reimbursable healthcare items or services as evidence of the intent to provide a kickback. Many states also have similar anti-
kickback laws that are not necessarily limited to items or services for which payment is made by a federal healthcare program. Moreover, both federal and
state laws prohibit bribery and similar behavior.

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We  do  not  believe  we  directly  order  or  provide  healthcare  services  that  are  reimbursable  by  Medicare,  Medicaid  or  other  third-party  payors  or  submit
claims or receive reimbursement from any such payor. However, nonetheless, in addition to direct enforcement action against us, if our advisory services or
Solutions offered to customers are associated with action by customers that is determined or alleged to be in violation of these laws and regulations, it is
possible that an enforcement agency would also try to hold us liable.

There are also numerous federal and state laws that prohibit the submission of false information, or the failure to disclose information, in connection with
submission and payment of claims for health care items and services by health care providers. For example, the federal civil False Claims Act prohibits,
among other things, individuals or entities from knowingly presenting, or causing to be presented, to the U.S. federal government, claims for payment or
approval that are false or fraudulent, or knowingly making, using or causing to be made or used, a false record or statement material to a false or fraudulent
claim. In addition, the government may assert that a claim including items and services resulting from a violation of the U.S. federal Anti-Kickback Statute
constitutes a false or fraudulent claim for purposes of the civil False Claims Act.

HIPAA  also  created  new  federal  criminal  statutes  that  prohibit  knowingly  and  willfully  executing,  or  attempting  to  execute,  a  scheme  to  defraud  or  to
obtain, by means of false or fraudulent pretenses, representations or promises, any money or property owned by, or under the control or custody of, any
healthcare  benefit  program,  including  private  third-party  payors,  and  knowingly  and  willfully  falsifying,  concealing  or  covering  up  by  trick,  scheme  or
device,  a  material  fact  or  making  any  materially  false,  fictitious  or  fraudulent  statement  in  connection  with  the  delivery  of  or  payment  for  healthcare
benefits, items or services. Similar to the federal Anti-Kickback Statute, a person or entity does not need to have actual knowledge of the statute or specific
intent to violate it in order to have committed a violation.

Any  determination  by  a  court  or  regulatory  agency  that  we  or  any  of  our  customers,  vendors  or  partners  have  violated  these  laws  could  subject  us  to
significant civil or criminal penalties, invalidate all or portions of some of our customer contracts, require us to change or terminate some portions of our
business,  require  us  to  refund  portions  of  our  services  fees,  subject  us  to  additional  reporting  requirements  and  oversight  under  a  corporate  integrity
agreement or similar agreement to resolve allegations of noncompliance with these laws, cause us to be disqualified from serving customers doing business
with government payors, and have an adverse effect on our business. Our customers’ failure to comply with these laws and regulations in connection with
our services could result in substantial liability (including, but not limited to, criminal liability), adversely affect demand for our Solution, and force us to
expend significant capital, research and development, and other resources to address the failure. Even an unsuccessful challenge by regulatory authorities
of our activities could result in adverse publicity and could require a costly response from us.

If our arrangements with physicians and other health care professionals are found to constitute the improper rendering of professional medical
services or fee splitting under applicable state laws, our business, financial condition and our ability to operate in those states could be adversely
impacted.

We employ and contract with physicians and other licensed health care professionals who assist our customers with the customers’ care coordination, care
management, population health management, and patient safety activities. Although we do not intend to provide medical care, treatment, or advice, our
relationships  with  such  health  care  professionals  may  implicate  certain  state  laws  in  the  United  States  in  which  we  operate  that  generally  prohibit  non-
professional entities from providing licensed medical services, exercising control over licensed physicians or other licensed health care professionals or
engaging  in  certain  practices  such  as  fee-splitting  with  such  licensed  professionals.  There  can  be  no  assurance  that  these  laws  will  be  interpreted  in  a
manner consistent with our practices or that other laws or regulations will not be enacted in the future that could have a material and adverse effect on our
business, financial condition and results of operations. Regulatory authorities, state boards of medicine, state attorneys general and other parties may assert
that we are engaged in the provision of professional medical services, and/or that our arrangements with our affiliated physicians and other licensed health
care professionals constitute unlawful fee-splitting. If a jurisdiction’s prohibition on the corporate practice of medicine or fee-splitting is interpreted in a
manner that is inconsistent with our practices, we may be required to restructure or terminate some portions of our business, require us to refund portions of
our  services  fees,  and  have  an  adverse  effect  on  our  business.  Even  an  unsuccessful  challenge  by  regulatory  authorities  of  our  activities  could  result  in
adverse publicity and could require a costly response from us.

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The FDA may modify its enforcement policies with respect to medical software products, and our products may become subject to extensive regulatory
requirements, which may increase the cost of conducting, or otherwise harm, our business.

The FDA may regulate medical or health-related software, including machine learning functionality and predictive algorithms, if such software falls within
the  definition  of  a  “medical  device”  under  the  Federal  Food,  Drug,  and  Cosmetic  Act  (FDCA).  Medical  devices  are  subject  to  extensive  and  rigorous
regulation  by  the  FDA  and  by  other  federal,  state  and  local  authorities.  The  FDCA  and  related  regulations  govern  the  conditions  of  safety,  efficacy,
clearance,  approval,  manufacturing,  quality  system  requirements,  labeling,  packaging,  distribution,  storage,  recordkeeping,  reporting,  marketing,
advertising, and promotion of medical devices. However, historically, the FDA has exercised enforcement discretion for certain low-risk software products,
and has issued several guidance documents outlining its approach to the regulation of software as a medical device. In addition, the 21st Century Cures Act
amended the FDCA to exclude from the definition of “medical device” certain medical-related software, including software used for administrative support
functions at a healthcare facility, software intended for maintaining or encouraging a healthy lifestyle, software designed to store electronic health records,
software for transferring, storing, or displaying medical device data or in vitro diagnostic data, and certain clinical decision support software. Accordingly,
we believe our currently marketed products are not currently regulated by the FDA as medical devices, or that our products are otherwise subject to FDA’s
current enforcement discretion policies applicable to software products. However, there is a risk that the FDA could disagree with our determination, or that
the FDA could alter its enforcement discretion policies, and in each case, subject our software to more stringent medical device regulations.

If  the  FDA  determines  that  any  of  our  current  or  future  analytics  applications  are  regulated  as  medical  devices,  we  would  become  subject  to  various
requirements under the FDCA and the FDA’s implementing regulations. If this occurs, we may be required to cease marketing or to recall our product until
we obtain the requisite clearances or approvals, which would entail significant cost and could harm our business. Our failure to comply with applicable
regulatory requirements could result in enforcement action by the FDA, or comparable state or foreign regulatory authorities, including: untitled letters,
warning letters, fines, injunctions, consent decrees and civil penalties, recalls, termination of distribution, administrative detentions, seizure of our products,
operating restrictions, partial suspension or total shutdown of production, delays in or refusal to grant clearances or approvals, prohibitions on sales of our
products, and criminal prosecution. Any of these sanctions could result in higher than anticipated costs or lower than anticipated sales and have a material
adverse effect on our reputation, business, financial condition and results of operations

The healthcare regulatory and political framework is uncertain and evolving.

Existing and new laws and regulations affecting the healthcare industry, or changes to existing laws and regulations could create unexpected liabilities for
us,  cause  us  to  incur  additional  costs,  and/or  restrict  our  operations.  Reforming  the  healthcare  industry  has  been  a  priority  for  U.S.  politicians,  and  key
members of the legislative and executive branches have proposed a wide variety of potential changes and policy goals. Certain changes to laws impacting
our industry, or perceived intentions to do so, could affect our business and results of operations. By way of example, in March 2010, the Affordable Care
Act, or ACA, was enacted, which substantially changed the way healthcare is financed by both governmental and private insurers and has significantly
impacted our industry and, to some degree, our business. Since its enactment, there have been judicial, executive and Congressional challenges to certain
aspects of the ACA. The U.S. Supreme Court is currently reviewing the constitutionality of the ACA in its entirety, although it is unclear when or how the
Supreme Court will rule. We anticipate that new cost containment measures or other healthcare reforms will continue to be implemented at both the federal
and state level, any of which could harm our business, financial condition and results of operations.

Due to the particular nature of certain services we provide or the manner in which we provide them, we may be subject to additional government
regulation and foreign government regulation.

While our Solution is primarily subject to government regulations pertaining to healthcare, certain aspects of our Solution may require us to comply with
regulatory schema from other areas. Examples of such regulatory schema include:

•

Antitrust Laws. Our  national  cloud-based  network  allows  us  access  to  cost  and  pricing  data  for  a  large  number  of  providers  in  most  regional
markets,  as  well  as  to  the  contracted  rates  for  third-party  payors.  To  the  extent  that  our  Solution  enables  providers  to  compare  their  cost  and
pricing data with those of their competitors, those providers could collude to increase the pricing for their services, to reduce the compensation
they pay their employees, or to collectively negotiate agreements with third parties. Similarly, if payors are able to compare their contracted rates
of  payment  to  providers,  those  payors  may  seek  to  reduce  the  amounts  they  might  otherwise  pay.  Such  actions  may  be  deemed  to  be  anti-
competitive and a violation of federal antitrust laws. To the extent that we are deemed to have enabled such activities, we could be subject to fines
and  penalties  imposed  by  the  U.S.  Department  of  Justice  or  the  FTC  and  be  required  to  curtail  or  terminate  the  services  that  permitted  such
collusion.

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•

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Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) and Foreign Anti-Bribery Laws. The FCPA makes it illegal for U.S. persons, including U.S. companies,
and  their  subsidiaries,  directors,  officers,  employees,  and  agents,  to  promise,  authorize  or  make  any  corrupt  payment,  or  otherwise  provide
anything of value, directly or indirectly, to any foreign official, any foreign political party or party official, or candidate for foreign political office
to obtain or retain business. Violations of the FCPA can also result in violations of other U.S. laws, including anti-money laundering, mail and
wire fraud, and conspiracy laws. There are severe penalties for violating the FCPA. In addition, the Company may also be subject to other non-
U.S. anti-corruption or anti-bribery laws, such as the U.K. Bribery Act 2010. If our employees, contractors, vendors, or partners fail to comply
with the FCPA and/or foreign anti-bribery laws, we may be subject to penalties or sanctions, and our ability to develop new prospects and retain
existing customers could be adversely affected.

Economic Sanctions and Export Controls. Economic and trade sanctions programs that are administered by the U.S. Treasury Department’s Office
of  Foreign  Assets  Control  (OFAC)  prohibit  or  restrict  transactions  to  or  from,  and  dealings  with  specified  countries  and  territories,  their
governments,  and  in  certain  circumstances,  with  individuals  and  entities  that  are  specially  designated  nationals  of  those  countries,  and  other
sanctioned  persons,  including  narcotics  traffickers  and  terrorists  or  terrorist  organizations.  As  federal,  state  and  foreign  legislative  regulatory
scrutiny and enforcement actions in these areas increase, we expect our costs to comply with these requirements will increase as well. Failure to
comply with any of these requirements could result in the limitation, suspension or termination of our services, imposition of significant civil and
criminal penalties, including fines, and/or the seizure and/or forfeiture of our assets. Further, our Solution incorporates encryption technology. This
encryption  technology  may  be  exported  from  the  United  States  only  with  the  required  export  authorizations,  including  by  a  license,  a  license
exception or other appropriate government authorizations. Such solutions may also be subject to certain regulatory reporting requirements. Various
countries  also  regulate  the  import  of  certain  encryption  technology,  including  through  import  permitting  and  licensing  requirements,  and  have
enacted laws that could limit our customers’ ability to import our Solution into those countries. Governmental regulation of encryption technology
and of exports and imports of encryption products, or our failure to obtain required approval for our Solution, when applicable, could harm our
international sales and adversely affect our revenue. Compliance with applicable regulatory requirements regarding the provision of our Solution,
including with respect to new applications, may delay the introduction of our Solution in various markets or, in some cases, prevent the provision
of our Solution to some countries altogether.

Regulatory Certification.  We  must  obtain  certification  from  governmental  agencies,  such  as  the  Agency  for  Healthcare  Research  and  Quality
(AHRQ) to sell certain of our analytics applications and services in the United States. We cannot be certain that our Solution will continue to meet
these  standards.  The  failure  to  comply  with  these  certification  requirements  could  result  in  the  loss  of  certification,  which  could  restrict  our
Solution offerings and cause us to lose customers.

Risks Related to Internet Regulation

Our business could be adversely impacted by changes in laws and regulations related to the Internet or changes in access to the Internet generally.

The future success of our business depends upon the continued use of the Internet as a primary medium for communication, business applications, and
commerce. Federal or state government bodies or agencies have in the past adopted, and may in the future adopt, laws or regulations affecting the use of
the Internet as a commercial medium. Legislators, regulators, or government bodies or agencies may also make legal or regulatory changes or interpret or
apply  existing  laws  or  regulations  that  relate  to  the  use  of  the  Internet  in  new  and  materially  different  ways.  Changes  in  these  laws,  regulations  or
interpretations could require us to modify our platform in order to comply with these changes, to incur substantial additional costs or divert resources that
could otherwise be deployed to grow our business, or expose us to unanticipated civil or criminal liability, among other things.

In  addition,  government  agencies  and  private  organizations  have  imposed,  and  may  in  the  future  impose,  additional  taxes,  fees  or  other  charges  for
accessing the Internet or commerce conducted via the Internet. Internet access is frequently provided by companies that have significant market power and
could  take  actions  that  degrade,  disrupt  or  increase  the  cost  of  our  customers’  use  of  our  platform,  which  could  negatively  impact  our  business.  Net
neutrality rules, which were designed to ensure that all online content is treated the same by Internet service providers and other companies that provide
broadband services were repealed by the Federal Communications Commission effective June 2018. The repeal of the net neutrality rules could force us to
incur greater operating expenses or our customers’ use of our platform could be adversely affected, either of which could harm our business and results of
operations.

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These developments could limit the growth of Internet-related commerce or communications generally or result in reductions in the demand for Internet-
based platforms and services such as ours, increased costs to us or the disruption of our business. In addition, as the Internet continues to experience growth
in the numbers of users, frequency of use and amount of data transmitted, the use of the Internet as a business tool could be adversely affected due to delays
in  the  development  or  adoption  of  new  standards  and  protocols  to  handle  increased  demands  of  Internet  activity,  security,  reliability,  cost,  ease-of-use,
accessibility,  and  quality  of  service.  The  performance  of  the  Internet  and  its  acceptance  as  a  business  tool  has  been  adversely  affected  by  “viruses,”
“worms,” and similar malicious programs and the Internet has experienced a variety of outages and other delays as a result of damage to portions of its
infrastructure. If the use of the Internet generally, or our platform specifically, is adversely affected by these or other issues, we could be forced to incur
substantial costs, demand for our platform could decline, and our results of operations and financial condition could be harmed.

Risks Related to Tax Regulation

Taxing authorities may successfully assert that we should have collected or in the future should collect sales and use, value-added or similar
transactional taxes, and we could be subject to liability with respect to past or future sales, which could adversely affect our results of operations.

We do not collect sales and use, value-added, and similar transactional taxes in all jurisdictions in which we have sales, based on our belief that such taxes
are not applicable or that we are not required to collect such taxes with respect to the jurisdiction. Sales and use, value-added, and similar tax laws and rates
vary greatly by jurisdiction. Certain jurisdictions in which we do not collect such taxes may assert that such taxes are applicable, which could result in tax
assessments,  penalties,  and  interest,  and  we  may  be  required  to  collect  such  taxes  in  the  future.  Such  tax  assessments,  penalties,  interest  or  future
requirements,  increase  in  tax  rates,  or  a  combination  of  the  foregoing  may  result  in  an  increase  in  our  sales  and  similar  transactional  taxes,  increase
administrative burdens or costs, or otherwise adversely affect our business, results of operations, or financial condition.

Unanticipated changes in our effective tax rate and additional tax liabilities, including as a result of our international operations or implementation of
new tax rules, could harm our future results.

We are subject to income taxes in the United States and are expanding into various foreign jurisdictions that are subject to income tax. Our domestic and
international  tax  liabilities  are  subject  to  the  allocation  of  expenses  in  differing  jurisdictions  and  complex  transfer  pricing  regulations  administered  by
taxing  authorities  in  various  jurisdictions.  Tax  rates  in  the  jurisdictions  in  which  we  operate  may  change  as  a  result  of  factors  outside  of  our  control  or
relevant taxing authorities may disagree with our determinations as to the income and expenses attributable to specific jurisdictions. In addition, changes in
tax and trade laws, treaties or regulations, or their interpretation or enforcement, have become more unpredictable and may become more stringent, which
could materially adversely affect our tax position.

Forecasting our estimated annual effective tax rate is complex and subject to uncertainty, and there may be material differences between our forecasted and
actual effective tax rate. Our effective tax rate could be adversely affected by changes in the mix of earnings and losses in countries with differing statutory
tax rates, certain non-deductible expenses, the valuation of deferred tax assets and liabilities, adjustments to income taxes upon finalization of tax returns,
changes  in  available  tax  attributes,  decision  to  repatriate  non-U.S.  earnings  for  which  we  have  not  previously  provided  for  U.S.  taxes,  and  changes  in
federal, state, or international tax laws and accounting principles.

Finally, we may be subject to income tax audits throughout the world. An adverse resolution of one or more uncertain tax positions in any period could
have a material impact on our results of operations or financial condition for that period.

Our ability to use our net operating losses to offset future taxable income may be subject to certain limitations.

As  of  December  31,  2020  and  December  31,  2019,  we  had  net  operating  loss  (NOL)  carryforwards  for  federal  income  tax  purposes  of  approximately
$419.6 million and $269.1 million, respectively, and state income tax purposes of approximately $334.6 million and $215.2 million, respectively, which
may be available to offset taxable income in the future, and which expire in various years beginning in 2032 for federal purposes if not utilized. The state
NOLs will expire depending upon the various rules in the states in which we operate. A lack of future taxable income would adversely affect our ability to
utilize  these  NOLs  before  they  expire.  In  general,  under  Section  382  of  the  Internal  Revenue  Code  of  1986,  as  amended  (the  Code)  a  corporation  that
undergoes an “ownership change” (as defined under Section 382 of the Code and applicable Treasury Regulations) is subject to limitations on its ability to
utilize its pre-change NOLs to offset its future taxable income.

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We may experience a future ownership change under Section 382 of the Code that could affect our ability to utilize the NOLs to offset our income.
Furthermore, our ability to utilize NOLs of companies that we have acquired or may acquire in the future may be subject to limitations. There is also a risk
that due to regulatory changes, such as suspensions on the use of NOLs or other unforeseen reasons, our existing NOLs could expire or otherwise be
unavailable to reduce future income tax liabilities, including for state income tax purposes. Certain provisions of the Tax Act (as defined below), as
amended by the CARES Act, also limit the use of NOLs, as discussed further below. For these reasons, we may not be able to utilize a material portion of
our NOLs, even if we attain profitability, which could potentially result in increased future tax liability to us and could adversely affect our results of
operations and financial condition.

Comprehensive tax reform legislation could adversely affect our business and financial condition.

On  December  22,  2017,  the  Tax  Cuts  and  Jobs  Act  of  2017  (the  Tax  Act)  was  signed  into  law.  The  Tax  Act  contains,  among  other  things,  significant
changes to corporate taxation, including (i) a reduction of the corporate tax rate from a top marginal rate of 35% to a flat rate of 21%, (ii) a limitation of the
tax deduction for interest expense to 30% of adjusted earnings (except for certain small businesses) (increased to 50% by the CARES Act for taxable years
beginning  in  2019  and  2020),  (iii)  a  limitation  of  the  deduction  for  NOLs  in  taxable  years  beginning  after  December  31,  2020  to  80%  of  current  year
taxable income in respect of NOLs generated during or after 2018 and elimination of net operating loss carrybacks for NOLs arising in tax years ending
after December 31, 2020, (iv) a one-time tax on offshore earnings at reduced rates regardless of whether they are repatriated, (v) immediate deductions for
certain  new  investments  instead  of  deductions  for  depreciation  expense  over  time,  and  (vi)  a  modification  or  repeal  of  many  business  deductions  and
credits. For federal NOLs arising in tax years beginning after December 31, 2017, the Tax Act (as modified by the CARES Act) limits a taxpayer’s ability
to utilize federal NOL carryforwards in taxable years beginning after December 31, 2020 to 80% of taxable income. In addition, federal NOLs arising in
tax years ending after December 31, 2017 can be carried forward indefinitely, but carryback of federal NOLs arising in tax years ending after December 31,
2020  is  generally  prohibited.  It  is  uncertain  if  and  to  what  extent  various  states  will  conform  to  the  newly  enacted  federal  tax  law.  We  will  continue  to
examine the impact the Tax Act and CARES Act may have on our results of operations and financial condition.

Risks Related to Our Outstanding Convertible Notes

Servicing our Notes may require a significant amount of cash, and we may not have sufficient cash or the ability to raise the funds necessary to settle
conversions of the Notes in cash, repay the Notes at maturity, or repurchase the Notes as required.

On  April  14,  2020,  we  issued  $230.0  million  in  aggregate  principal  amount  of  2.50%  Convertible  Senior  Notes  (the  Notes)  due  2025,  pursuant  to  an
Indenture  dated  April  14,  2020,  with  U.S.  Bank  National  Association,  as  trustee,  in  a  private  offering  to  qualified  institutional  buyers.  We  received  net
proceeds from the Notes of $222.5 million, after deducting the initial purchasers’ discounts and offering expenses payable by us. The Notes are governed
by an indenture (the Indenture) between us, as the issuer, and U.S. Bank National Association, as trustee. The Notes are our senior, unsecured obligations
and accrue interest payable semiannually in arrears on April 15 and October 15 of each year, beginning on October 15, 2020, at a rate of 2.50% per year.
The Notes will mature on April 15, 2025, unless earlier converted, redeemed, or repurchased. The Indenture does not contain any financial covenants or
restrictions on the payments of dividends, the incurrence of indebtedness, or the issuance or repurchase of securities by us or any of our subsidiaries.

A holder may convert all or any portion of its Notes, at its option, subject to certain conditions and during certain periods, into cash, shares of our common
stock or a combination of cash and shares of our common stock, with the form of consideration determined at our election. Noteholders will have the right
to require us to repurchase all or a portion of their notes at 100% of the principal amount of Notes to be repurchased, plus accrued and unpaid interest to,
but excluding, the repurchase date, upon the occurrence of certain events. The conversion rate is initially 32.6797 shares of our common stock per $1,000
principal amount of Notes (which is equivalent to an initial conversion price of approximately $30.60 per share of our common stock). If the Notes have
not previously been converted, redeemed or repurchased, we will be required to repay the Notes in cash at maturity.

Our  ability  to  make  required  cash  payments  in  connection  with  redemptions  or  conversions  of  the  Notes,  repurchase  the  Notes  upon  the  occurrence  of
certain events, or to repay or refinance the Notes at maturity will depend on market conditions and our future performance, which is subject to economic,
financial,  competitive,  and  other  factors  beyond  our  control.  We  also  may  not  use  the  cash  proceeds  we  raised  through  the  issuance  of  the  Notes  in  an
optimally productive and profitable manner. Since inception, our business has generated net losses, and we may continue to incur significant losses. As a
result, we may not have enough available cash or be able to obtain financing at the time we are required to repurchase or repay the Notes or pay cash with
respect to Notes being converted.

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In addition, our ability to repurchase or to pay cash upon conversion or at maturity of the Notes may be limited by law or regulatory authority or by other
agreements governing our future indebtedness. Our failure to repurchase Notes upon the occurrence of certain events or to pay cash upon conversion or at
maturity of the Notes as required by the Indenture would constitute a default under the Indenture. A default under the Indenture or the occurrence of certain
events  that  allow  Noteholders  to  require  repurchase  could  also  lead  to  a  default  under  agreements  governing  our  future  indebtedness  and  could  have  a
material adverse effect on our business, results of operations, and financial condition. If the payment of the related indebtedness were to be accelerated after
any applicable notice or grace periods, we may not have sufficient funds to repay the indebtedness and repurchase the Notes or to pay cash upon conversion
or at maturity of the Notes.

We are subject to counterparty risk with respect to the Capped Calls.

In connection with the issuance of the Notes, we entered into the Capped Calls with certain option counterparties. We used approximately $21.6 million of
the  net  proceeds  from  the  Note  Offering  to  pay  the  cost  of  the  Capped  Calls  and  allocated  issuance  costs.  The  Capped  Calls  have  initial  cap  prices  of
$42.00 per share, subject to certain adjustments. The Capped Calls are expected generally to reduce the potential dilution to our common stock upon any
conversion of Notes and/or offset any cash payments we are required to make in excess of the principal amount of converted Notes, as the case may be,
with such reduction and/or offset subject to the cap price. The Capped Calls are separate transactions that we entered into with the option counterparties,
and are not part of the terms of the Notes. The option counterparties are financial institutions or affiliates of financial institutions, and we will be subject to
the risk that one or more of such option counterparties may default under the Capped Calls.

Our exposure to the credit risk of the option counterparties will not be secured by any collateral. If any option counterparty becomes subject to insolvency
proceedings,  we  will  become  an  unsecured  creditor  in  those  proceedings  with  a  claim  equal  to  our  exposure  at  that  time  under  the  Capped  Calls.  Our
exposure will depend on many factors but, generally, the increase in our exposure will be correlated to the increase in our common stock market price and
in the volatility of the market price of our common stock. In addition, upon a default by any option counterparty, we may suffer adverse tax consequences
and dilution with respect to our common stock. We can provide no assurance as to the financial stability or viability of any option counterparty.

The Capped Calls may affect the value of our common stock.

In connection with the issuance of the Notes, we entered into the Capped Calls with the option counterparties. The Capped Calls are expected generally to
reduce the potential dilution to our common stock upon any conversion of the Notes and/or offset any cash payments we are required to make in excess of
the principal amount of converted Notes, as the case may be.

From time to time, the option counterparties or their respective affiliates may modify their hedge positions by entering into or unwinding various derivative
transactions with respect to our common stock and/or purchasing or selling our common stock or other securities of ours in secondary market transactions
prior to the maturity of the Notes. This activity could cause or avoid an increase or a decrease in the market price of our common stock.

If we raise additional capital through debt financing, the terms of any new debt could further restrict our ability to operate our business.

If we raise any additional debt financing, the terms of such additional debt could further restrict our operating and financial flexibility by subjecting us to
customary  affirmative  and  negative  covenants,  indemnification  provisions,  and  events  of  default.  Further,  if  we  are  liquidated,  the  lender’s  rights  to
repayment would be senior to the rights of the holders of our common stock to receive any proceeds from the liquidation. Any declaration by a lender of an
event of default could significantly harm our business and prospects and could cause the price of our common shares to decline.

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Risks Related to Ownership of Our Common Stock

Risks Related to an Investment in Our Securities

We have a limited operating history in an evolving industry which makes it difficult to evaluate our current business future prospects and increases the
risk of your investment.

We launched operations in 2008 and we acquired Medicity, Able Health, Healthfinch and Vitalware in June 2018, February 2020,
July 2020 and September 2020, respectively. Our limited operating history, in particular with respect to the businesses we acquired in 2020, makes it
difficult to effectively assess or forecast our future prospects. You should consider our business and prospects in light of the risks and difficulties we
encounter or may encounter. These risks and difficulties include our ability to cost-effectively acquire new customers and retain existing customers,
maintain the quality of our technology infrastructure that can efficiently and reliably handle the requirements of our customers and the deployment of new
features and solutions and successfully compete with other companies that are currently in, or may enter, the healthcare solution space. Additional risks
include our ability to effectively manage growth, achieve synergies, responsibly use the data that customers share with us, process, store, protect, and use
personal data in compliance with governmental regulation, contractual obligations, and other legal obligations related to privacy and security and avoid
interruptions or disruptions in our service or slower than expected load times for our platform. If we fail to address the risks and difficulties that we face,
including those associated with the challenges listed above, our business and our results of operations will be adversely affected.

We have experienced significant net losses since inception, we expect to incur losses in the future, and we may not be able to generate sufficient
revenue to achieve and maintain profitability.

We have incurred significant net losses in the past, including net losses of $115.0 million and $60.1 million in the years ended December 31, 2020 and
2019, respectively. We had an accumulated deficit of $725.7 million as of December 31, 2020. We expect our costs will increase over time as we continue
to  invest  to  grow  our  business  and  build  relationships  with  customers,  develop  our  platform,  develop  new  solutions,  and  operate  as  a  public  company.
These efforts may prove to be more expensive than we currently anticipate, and we may not succeed in increasing our revenue sufficiently to offset these
higher expenses.

As  a  result,  we  may  need  to  raise  additional  capital  through  equity  and  debt  financings  in  order  to  fund  our  operations.  To  date,  we  have  financed  our
operations principally from the sale of redeemable convertible preferred stock, revenue from sales of our Solution and the incurrence of indebtedness. We
may also fail to improve the gross margins of our business. If we are unable to effectively manage these risks and difficulties as we encounter them, our
business, financial condition, and results of operations would be adversely affected. Our failure to achieve or maintain profitability could negatively impact
the value of our common stock.

The market price of our common stock may be volatile and may decline regardless of our operating performance, and you may lose all or part of your
investments.

The market price of our common stock may fluctuate significantly in response to numerous factors, many of which are beyond our control, including:

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overall performance of the equity markets and/or publicly-listed technology companies;

actual or anticipated fluctuations in our net revenue or other operating metrics;

changes in the financial projections we provide to the public or our failure to meet these projections;

failure of securities analysts to initiate or maintain coverage of us, changes in financial estimates by any securities analysts who follow our
company, or our failure to meet the estimates or the expectations of investors;

the economy as a whole and market conditions in our industry;

rumors and market speculation involving us or other companies in our industry;

announcements by us or our competitors of significant innovations, acquisitions, strategic partnerships, joint ventures, or capital commitments;

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new laws or regulations or new interpretations of existing laws or regulations applicable to our business;

lawsuits threatened or filed against us;

recruitment or departure of key personnel;

other events or factors, including those resulting from war, incidents of terrorism, or responses to these events; and

the expiration of contractual lock-up or market standoff agreements.

In addition, extreme price and volume fluctuations in the stock markets have affected and continue to affect many technology companies’ stock prices.
Often, their stock prices have fluctuated in ways unrelated or disproportionate to the companies’ operating performance. In the past, stockholders have filed
securities  class  action  litigation  following  periods  of  market  volatility.  If  we  were  to  become  involved  in  securities  litigation,  it  could  subject  us  to
substantial  costs,  divert  resources  and  the  attention  of  management  from  our  business,  and  harm  our  business.  Moreover,  because  of  these  fluctuations,
comparing  our  results  of  operations  on  a  period-to-period  basis  may  not  be  meaningful.  You  should  not  rely  on  our  past  results  as  an  indication  of  our
future  performance.  This  variability  and  unpredictability  could  also  result  in  our  failing  to  meet  the  expectations  of  industry  or  financial  analysts  or
investors  for  any  period.  If  our  net  revenue  or  results  of  operations  fall  below  the  expectations  of  analysts  or  investors  or  below  any  forecasts  we  may
provide to the market, or if the forecasts we provide to the market are below the expectations of analysts or investors, the price of our common stock could
decline substantially. Such a stock price decline could occur even when we have met any previously publicly stated net revenue or earnings forecasts that
we may provide.

If securities or industry analysts do not publish research, or publish inaccurate or unfavorable research, about our business, the price of our common
stock and trading volume could decline.

The  trading  market  for  our  common  stock  will  depend  in  part  on  the  research  and  reports  that  securities  or  industry  analysts  publish  about  us  or  our
business. Securities and industry analysts do not currently, and may never, publish research on our company. If few securities analysts commence coverage
of us, or if industry analysts cease coverage of us, the trading price for our common stock could be negatively affected. If one or more of the analysts who
cover us downgrade our common stock or publish inaccurate or unfavorable research about our business, our common stock price would likely decline. If
one or more of these analysts cease coverage of us or fail to publish reports on us on a regular basis, demand for our common stock could decrease, which
might cause our common stock price and trading volume to decline.

Our management has broad discretion in the use of proceeds from our IPO and the Note Offering and our use may not produce a positive rate of
return.

The  principal  purposes  of  our  IPO  were  to  increase  our  capitalization  and  financial  flexibility,  create  a  public  market  for  our  stock  and  thereby  enable
access  to  the  public  equity  markets  by  our  employees  and  stockholders,  obtain  additional  capital,  and  strengthen  our  position  in  the  healthcare  data
analytics applications and services market. We used a portion of the Note Offering proceeds to pay the cost of the capped call transactions related thereto
and to prepay in full all outstanding indebtedness under our credit agreement with OrbiMed. We cannot specify with certainty our plans for the use of the
net proceeds we received from these offerings. However, we intend to use the net proceeds we received from our IPO for working capital and other general
corporate purposes. We may also use a portion of the net proceeds from these offerings for the acquisition of, or investment in, technologies, solutions or
businesses that complement our business. Our management has broad discretion over the specific use of the net proceeds we received in these offerings and
might  not  be  able  to  obtain  a  significant  return,  if  any,  on  investment  of  these  net  proceeds.  Investors  will  need  to  rely  upon  the  judgment  of  our
management  with  respect  to  the  use  of  proceeds.  If  we  do  not  use  the  net  proceeds  that  we  received  in  our  IPO  and  the  Note  Offering  effectively,  our
business, results of operations, and financial condition could be harmed.

Our issuance of additional capital stock in connection with financings, acquisitions, investments, our stock incentive plans or otherwise will dilute all
other stockholders.

We expect to issue additional capital stock in the future that will result in dilution to all other stockholders. We expect to grant equity awards to employees,
directors,  and  consultants  under  our  stock  incentive  plans.  We  may  also  raise  capital  through  equity  financings  in  the  future.  As  part  of  our  business
strategy,  we  may  acquire  or  make  investments  in  complementary  companies,  products,  or  technologies  and  issue  equity  securities  to  pay  for  any  such
acquisition  or  investment,  such  as  our  issuance  of  equity  securities  in  connection  with  our  acquisitions  of  Able  Health,  Healthfinch,  and  Vitalware  in
February  2020,  July  2020,  and  September  2020,  respectively.  Any  such  issuances  of  additional  capital  stock  may  cause  stockholders  to  experience
significant dilution of their ownership interests and the per-share value of our common stock to decline.

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The requirements of being a public company may strain our resources, divert management’s attention and affect our ability to attract and retain
executive management and qualified board members.

As a public company, we are subject to the reporting requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the Exchange Act), the listing standards of
Nasdaq and other applicable securities rules and regulations. We expect that the requirements of these rules and regulations will continue to increase our
legal,  accounting,  and  financial  compliance  costs,  make  some  activities  more  difficult,  time-consuming,  and  costly,  and  place  significant  strain  on  our
personnel,  systems,  and  resources.  For  example,  the  Exchange  Act  requires,  among  other  things,  that  we  file  annual,  quarterly  and  current  reports  with
respect to our business and results of operations. As a result of the complexity involved in complying with the rules and regulations applicable to public
companies, our management’s attention may be diverted from other business concerns, which could harm our business, results of operations, and financial
condition.

Although we have already hired additional employees to assist us in complying with these requirements, we may need to hire more employees in the future
or  engage  outside  consultants,  which  will  increase  our  operating  expenses.  In  addition,  changing  laws,  regulations,  and  standards  relating  to  corporate
governance  and  public  disclosure  are  creating  uncertainty  for  public  companies,  increasing  legal  and  financial  compliance  costs,  and  making  some
activities more time-consuming. These laws, regulations, and standards are subject to varying interpretations, in many cases due to their lack of specificity,
and, as a result, their application in practice may evolve over time as new guidance is provided by regulatory and governing bodies. This could result in
continuing uncertainty regarding compliance matters and higher costs necessitated by ongoing revisions to disclosure and governance practices. We intend
to  invest  substantial  resources  to  comply  with  evolving  laws,  regulations  and  standards,  and  this  investment  may  result  in  increased  general  and
administrative expenses and a diversion of management’s time and attention from business operations to compliance activities. If our efforts to comply with
new laws, regulations, and standards differ from the activities intended by regulatory or governing bodies due to ambiguities related to their application and
practice, regulatory authorities may initiate legal proceedings against us and our business may be harmed.

We also expect that being a public company and these new rules and regulations will make it more expensive for us to obtain director and officer liability
insurance, and we may be required to accept reduced coverage or incur substantially higher costs to obtain coverage. These factors could also make it more
difficult for us to attract and retain qualified members of our board of directors, particularly to serve on our audit committee and compensation committee,
and qualified executive officers.

As a result of disclosure of information in filings required of a public company, our business and financial condition is more visible, which may result in an
increased risk of threatened or actual litigation, including by competitors and other third parties. If such claims are successful, our business and results of
operations could be harmed, and even if the claims do not result in litigation or are resolved in our favor, these claims, and the time and resources necessary
to resolve them, could divert the resources of our management and harm our business, results of operations, and financial condition.

The  individuals  who  now  constitute  our  senior  management  team  have  limited  experience  managing  a  publicly-traded  company  and  limited  experience
complying with the increasingly complex laws pertaining to public companies. Our senior management team may not successfully or efficiently manage
our transition to a public company that is subject to significant regulatory oversight and reporting obligations.

We do not intend to pay dividends on our common stock and, consequently, the ability of common stockholders to achieve a return on investment will
depend on appreciation, if any, in the price of our common stock.

You should not rely on an investment in our common stock to provide dividend income. We have never declared or paid any dividends on our capital stock.
We  intend  to  retain  any  earnings  to  finance  the  operation  and  expansion  of  our  business,  and  we  do  not  anticipate  paying  any  cash  dividends  in  the
foreseeable  future.  In  addition,  the  terms  of  any  future  credit  facility  or  financing  we  obtain  may  contain,  terms  prohibiting  or  limiting  the  amount  of
dividends that may be declared or paid on our common stock. As a result, common stockholders may only receive a return on investment if the market
price of our common stock increases.

We could be subject to securities class action litigation.

In the past, securities class action litigation has often been brought against a company following a decline in the market price of its securities. This risk is
especially relevant for us because technology and healthcare technology companies have experienced significant stock price volatility in recent years. If we
face such litigation, it could result in substantial costs and a diversion of management’s attention and resources, which could harm our business.

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Risks Related to Our Charter and Bylaws

Provisions in our charter documents and under Delaware law could make an acquisition of our company more difficult, limit attempts by our
stockholders to replace or remove our current board of directors, and limit the market price of our common stock.

Provisions  in  our  amended  and  restated  certificate  of  incorporation  and  amended  and  restated  bylaws  may  have  the  effect  of  delaying  or  preventing  a
change  of  control  or  changes  in  our  management.  Our  amended  and  restated  certificate  of  incorporation  and  amended  and  restated  bylaws,  include
provisions that:

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

provide that our board of directors is classified into three classes of directors with staggered three-year terms;

permit the board of directors to establish the number of directors and fill any vacancies and newly-created directorships;

require super-majority voting to amend some provisions in our amended and restated certificate of incorporation and amended and restated
bylaws;

authorize the issuance of “blank check” preferred stock that our board of directors could use to implement a stockholder rights plan;

provide that only a majority of our board of directors will be authorized to call a special meeting of stockholders;

prohibit stockholder action by written consent, which requires all stockholder actions to be taken at a meeting of our stockholders;

provide that the board of directors is expressly authorized to make, alter, or repeal our bylaws; and

advance notice requirements for nominations for election to our board of directors or for proposing matters that can be acted upon by stockholders
at annual stockholder meetings.

Moreover,  Section  203  of  the  Delaware  General  Corporation  Law  may  discourage,  delay,  or  prevent  a  change  in  control  of  our  company.  Section  203
imposes certain restrictions on mergers, business combinations, and other transactions between us and holders of 15% or more of our common stock.

Our amended and restated bylaws designate a state or federal court located within the State of Delaware as the exclusive forum for certain litigation
that may be initiated by our stockholders, which could limit stockholders’ ability to obtain a favorable judicial forum for disputes with us.

Our amended and restated bylaws provide, to the fullest extent permitted by law, that a state or federal court located within the State of Delaware will be
the exclusive forum for the following types of actions or proceedings under Delaware statutory or common law:

•

•

•

•

any derivative action or proceeding brought on our behalf;

any action asserting a breach of fiduciary duty;

any action asserting a claim against us arising pursuant to the Delaware General Corporation Law, our amended and restated certificate of
incorporation, or our amended and restated bylaws; or

any action asserting a claim against us that is governed by the internal affairs doctrine.

This exclusive forum provision will not apply to any causes of action arising under the Securities Act or the Exchange Act or any other claim for which the
federal courts have exclusive jurisdiction. Nothing in our amended and restated bylaws precludes stockholders that assert claims under the Securities Act or
the Exchange Act from bringing such claims in state or federal court, subject to applicable law. This choice of forum provision may limit a stockholder’s
ability  to  bring  a  claim  in  a  judicial  forum  that  it  finds  favorable  for  disputes  with  us  or  any  of  our  directors,  officers,  or  other  employees,  which  may
discourage lawsuits with respect to such claims. Alternatively, if a court were to find the choice of forum provision which will be contained in our amended
and  restated  bylaws  to  be  inapplicable  or  unenforceable  in  an  action,  we  may  incur  additional  costs  associated  with  resolving  such  action  in  other
jurisdictions, which could harm our business, results of operations, and financial condition.

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Item 1B. Unresolved Staff Comments

None.

Item 2. Properties

Our principal executive offices are located in South Jordan, Utah where we occupy facilities totaling approximately 118,207 square feet under a lease
that expires on December 31, 2031. We use this facility for administration, sales and marketing, technology and development and professional services. We
also  lease  offices  elsewhere  in  the  United  States  for  sales,  professional  services,  and  other  personnel,  including  offices  in  Minneapolis,  Minnesota,
Alpharetta, Georgia, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, San Francisco, California, Madison, Wisconsin, Yakima, Washington, and Dallas, Texas.

We intend to procure additional space as we add team members and expand geographically. We believe that our facilities are adequate to meet our
needs  for  the  immediate  future,  and  that,  should  it  be  needed,  suitable  additional  space  will  be  available  to  accommodate  any  such  expansion  of  our
operations.

Item 3. Legal Proceedings

We are, and from time to time may be, party to litigation and subject to claims incident to the ordinary course of business. As our growth continues, we
may become party to an increasing number of litigation matters and claims. The outcome of litigation and claims cannot be predicted with certainty, and the
resolution of these matters could materially affect our future results of operations, cash flows or financial position. We are not presently party to any legal
proceedings that in the opinion of management, if determined to adversely affect us, would individually or taken together have a material adverse effect on
our business, operating results, financial condition or cash flows.

Item 4. Mine Safety Disclosures

Not applicable.

Item 5. Market for Registrant’s Common Equity, Related Stockholder Matters and Issuer Purchases of Equity Securities

Market Information for Our Common Stock

PART II

Our common stock began trading on the Nasdaq Global Select Market under the symbol “HCAT” on July 25, 2019. Prior to that date, there was no

public trading market for our common stock.

Holders of Record

As of December 31, 2020, there were 101 holders of record of our common stock. The actual number of stockholders is greater than this number of

record holders and includes stockholders who are beneficial owners but whose shares are held in street name by brokers and other nominees.

Dividend Policy

We do not intend to pay cash dividends in the foreseeable future.

Securities Authorized for Issuance under Equity Compensation Plans

The  information  required  by  this  item  with  respect  to  our  equity  compensation  plans  is  incorporated  by  reference  in  our  proxy  statement  for

the 2021 Annual Meeting of Stockholders to be filed with the SEC within 120 days of the year ended December 31, 2020.

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Table of Contents

Stock Performance Graph

The following performance graph and related information is "furnished" and shall not be deemed to be "soliciting material" or "filed" for purposes of
Section 18 of the Exchange Act and Regulation 14A under the Exchange Act nor shall such information be incorporated by reference into any filing of
Health Catalyst, Inc. under the Exchange Act or the Securities Act, except to the extent we specifically incorporate it by reference in such filing.

The graph set forth below compares the cumulative total return to stockholders on our common stock relative to the cumulative total returns of the
Standard  &  Poor’s  500  Index  (the  S&P  500)  and  the  S&P  500  Information  Technology  Index  between  July  25,  2019  (the  date  our  common  stock
commenced trading) through December 31, 2020. All values assume a $100 initial investment at market close on July 25, 2019. The initial public offering
price of our common stock, which had a closing stock price of $39.17 on July 25, 2019, was $26.00 per share. Data for the S&P 500 and the S&P 500
Information Technology Index assume reinvestment of dividends. The comparisons are based on historical data and are not indicative of, nor intended to
forecast, the future performance of our common stock.

Company/Index
Health Catalyst, Inc.
S&P 500
S&P 500 Information Technology

__________________
(1) Base period

Jul 25, 2019

(1)

Sep 30, 2019

Dec 31, 2019

Mar 31, 2020

Jun 30, 2020

Sep 30, 2020

Dec 31, 2020

100 
100 
100 

81 
99 
98 

89 
108 
112 

67 
86 
98 

74 
103 
128 

93 
112 
143 

111 
125 
159 

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Unregistered Sales of Equity Securities and Use of Proceeds

Unregistered Sales of Equity Securities

During the year ended December 31, 2020, we did not issue or sell any unregistered securities not previously disclosed in a Quarterly Report on Form

10-Q or in a Current Report on Form 8-K.

Issuer Purchases of Equity Securities

None.

Item 6. Selected Consolidated Financial and Other Data

You should read the selected consolidated financial data below in conjunction with “Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition
and  Results  of  Operations”  and  the  consolidated  financial  statements,  related  notes,  and  other  financial  information  included  elsewhere  in  this  Annual
Report  on  Form  10-K.  The  selected  consolidated  financial  data  in  this  section  are  not  intended  to  replace  the  consolidated  financial  statements  and  are
qualified in their entirety by the consolidated financial statements and related notes included elsewhere in this Annual Report on Form 10-K.

The  following  selected  consolidated  statements  of  operations  data  for  the  years  ended  December  31,  2020,  2019,  and  2018,  and  the  consolidated
balance  sheet  data  as  of  December  31,  2020  and  2019  have  been  derived  from  our  audited  consolidated  financial  statements  included  elsewhere  in  this
Annual Report on Form 10-K. The consolidated balance sheet data as of December 31, 2018 has been derived from our audited financial statements not
included in this Annual Report on Form 10-K. Our historical results are not necessarily indicative of the results that may be expected in the future.

Consolidated Statements of Operations Data:

Revenue:

Technology

Professional services

Total revenue

Cost of revenue, excluding depreciation and amortization:

Technology

(1)(2)

Professional services

(1)(2)(3)

Total cost of revenue, excluding depreciation and amortization

Operating expenses:

Sales and marketing

(1)(2)(3)

Research and development

(1)(2)(3)

General and administrative

(1)(2)(3)(4)(5)(6)

Depreciation and amortization

Total operating expenses

Loss from operations

Loss on extinguishment of debt

Interest and other expense, net

Loss before income taxes

Income tax provision (benefit)

Net loss

Less: accretion of redeemable convertible preferred stock

Net loss attributable to common stockholders

Net loss per share attributable to common stockholders, basic and diluted

Weighted-average number of shares outstanding used in calculating net loss per share attributable

Year Ended December 31,

2020

2019

2018

(in thousands, except per share data)

$

110,467  $

83,975  $

78,378 

188,845 

35,604 

62,473 

98,077 

55,411 

53,517 

59,240 

18,725 

186,893 

(96,125)

(8,514)

(11,572)

(116,211)

70,966 

154,941 

27,797 

47,548 

75,345 

47,284 

46,252 

31,713 

9,212 

134,461 

(54,865)

(1,670)

(3,419)

(59,954)

(1,194)
(115,017) $

— 

(115,017) $

142 
(60,096) $

180,826 
(240,922) $

(2.91) $

(12.86) $

$

$

$

57,224 

55,350 

112,574 

19,429 

40,423 

59,852 

44,123 

38,592 

22,690 

7,412 

112,817 

(60,095)

— 

(2,024)

(62,119)

(135)
(61,984)

52,037 
(114,021)

(23.76)

to common stockholders, basic and diluted

39,541 

18,741 

4,798 

55

Table of Contents

__________________

(1)

Includes stock-based compensation expense, as follows:

Stock-Based Compensation Expense:
Cost of revenue, excluding depreciation and amortization:

Technology
Professional services

Sales and marketing expenses
Research and development expenses
General and administrative expenses

Total

(2)

Includes tender offer payments deemed compensation expense, as follows:

Tender Offer Payments Deemed Compensation Expense:
Cost of revenue, excluding depreciation and amortization:

Technology
Professional services

Sales and marketing expenses
Research and development expenses
General and administrative expenses

Total

(3)

Includes post-acquisition restructuring costs, as follows:

Post-Acquisition Restructuring Costs:
Cost of revenue, excluding depreciation and amortization:

Professional services

Sales and marketing expenses
Research and development expenses
General and administrative expenses

Total

(4)

Includes acquisition transaction costs, as follows:

Acquisition Transaction Costs:
General and administrative expenses

(5)

Includes the change in fair value of contingent consideration liabilities, as follows:

Change in Fair Value of Contingent Consideration:
General and administrative expenses

(6)

Includes duplicate headquarters rent expense, as follows:

Duplicate Headquarters Rent Expense:
General and administrative expenses

56

Year Ended December 31,

2020

2019

(in thousands)

2018

803 
3,453 
13,093 
8,069 
12,539 
37,957 

$

$

200 
968 
3,811 
4,841 
8,024 
17,844 

$

$

Year Ended December 31,

2020

2019

(in thousands)

2018

— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 

$
$
$
$
$
$

— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 

$

$

Year Ended December 31,

2020

2019

(in thousands)

2018

— 
— 
— 
— 
— 

$

$

108 
306 
32 
— 
446 

$

$

78 
480 
1,514 
787 
1,339 
4,198 

28 
284 
3,967 
906 
3,133 
8,318 

337 
780 
513 
484 
2,114 

2020

2020

2020

Year Ended December 31,

2019

(in thousands)

2018

2,670 

$

— 

$

— 

Year Ended December 31,

2019

(in thousands)

2018

14,088 

$

— 

$

— 

Year Ended December 31,

2019

(in thousands)

2018

1,398 

$

— 

$

— 

$

$

$

$

$

$

$

$

$

Table of Contents

Consolidated Balance Sheet Data:

Cash and cash equivalents

Short-term investments

Working capital

(1)

Total assets

Deferred revenue, current and non-current

Long-term debt, net of current portion

Redeemable convertible preferred stock

Accumulated deficit

Total stockholders’ equity (deficit)

___________________

As of December 31,

2020

2019

2018

(in thousands)

$

91,954  $

18,032  $

178,917 

288,908 

577,740 

49,023 

168,994 

— 

(725,650)

276,099 

210,245 

246,675 

302,360 

32,112 

48,200 

— 

(610,514)

200,644 

28,431 

4,761 

49,807 

110,975 

32,035 

18,814 

409,845 

(374,772)

(374,768)

(1) Working capital is calculated as current assets less current liabilities, excluding current deferred revenue. See our consolidated financial statements and the related notes included elsewhere

in this Annual Report on Form 10-K for further details regarding our current assets, current liabilities, and deferred revenue.

Non-GAAP Financial Data:

Adjusted Technology Gross Profit

(1)

Adjusted Technology Gross Margin

(1)

Adjusted Professional Services Gross Profit

(1)

Adjusted Professional Services Gross Margin

(1)

Total Adjusted Gross Profit

(1)

Total Adjusted Gross Margin

(1)

Adjusted EBITDA
___________________

(1)

Year Ended December 31,

2020

2019

2018

(in thousands, except percentages)

$

$

$

$

75,666 

68 %

19,358 

25 %

95,024 

50 %

(21,287)

$

$

$

$

56,378 

67 %

24,494 

35 %

80,872 

52 %

(27,363)

$

$

$

$

37,901 

66 %

16,028 

29 %

53,929 

48 %

(38,053)

(1) These measures are not calculated in accordance with GAAP. See “Reconciliation of Non-GAAP Financial Measures” for more information about these financial measures, including the

limitations of such measures and a reconciliation of each measure to the most directly comparable measure calculated in accordance with GAAP.

Other Key Metrics

DOS Subscription Customers

(1)

As of December 31,

2020

2019

2018

74 

65 

50 

___________________
(1) See “Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations - Other Key Metrics” for more information about this metric.

Dollar-based Retention Rate

(1)

Year Ended December 31,

2020

2019

2018

102 %

109 %

107 %

___________________
(1) See “Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations - Other Key Metrics” for more information about this metric.

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Reconciliation of Non-GAAP Financial Measures

In addition to our results determined in accordance with GAAP, we believe the following non-GAAP measures are useful in evaluating our operating
performance. We use the following non-GAAP financial information to evaluate our ongoing operations, as a component in determining employee bonus
compensation,  and  for  internal  planning  and  forecasting  purposes.  We  believe  that  non-GAAP  financial  information,  when  taken  collectively,  may  be
helpful  to  investors  because  it  provides  consistency  and  comparability  with  past  financial  performance.  However,  non-GAAP  financial  information  is
presented for supplemental informational purposes only, has limitations as an analytical tool and should not be considered in isolation or as a substitute for
financial information presented in accordance with GAAP. In addition, other companies, including companies in our industry, may calculate similarly-titled
non-GAAP  measures  differently  or  may  use  other  measures  to  evaluate  their  performance,  all  of  which  could  reduce  the  usefulness  of  our  non-GAAP
financial  measures  as  tools  for  comparison.  A  reconciliation  is  provided  below  for  each  non-GAAP  financial  measure  to  the  most  directly  comparable
financial measure stated in accordance with GAAP. Investors are encouraged to review the related GAAP financial measures and the reconciliation of these
non-GAAP financial measures to their most directly comparable GAAP financial measures, and not to rely on any single financial measure to evaluate our
business.

Adjusted Gross Profit and Adjusted Gross Margin

Adjusted Gross Profit is a non-GAAP financial measure that we define as revenue less cost of revenue, excluding depreciation and amortization and
excluding  stock-based  compensation,  tender  offer  payments  deemed  compensation,  and  post-acquisition  restructuring  costs.  We  define Adjusted  Gross
Margin as our Adjusted Gross Profit divided by our revenue. Adjusted Technology Gross Profit and Adjusted Professional Services Gross Profit are the
portions of Adjusted Gross Profit related to technology and professional services, respectively. We believe these non-GAAP financial measures are useful
in evaluating our operating performance compared to that of other companies in our industry, as these metrics generally eliminate the effects of certain
items that may vary from company to company for reasons unrelated to overall operating performance.

The  following  is  a  reconciliation  of  revenue  to  our  Adjusted  Gross  Profit  and  Adjusted  Gross  Margin  in  total  and  for  technology  and  professional

services for the years ended December 31, 2020, 2019, and 2018:

Revenue

Cost of revenue, excluding depreciation and amortization

Gross profit, excluding depreciation and amortization

Add:

Stock-based compensation

Adjusted Gross Profit

Gross margin, excluding depreciation and amortization

Adjusted Gross Margin

Revenue
Cost of revenue, excluding depreciation and amortization
Gross profit, excluding depreciation and amortization
Add:

Stock-based compensation
Post-acquisition restructuring costs

(2)

Adjusted Gross Profit

Gross margin, excluding depreciation and amortization

Adjusted Gross Margin

Year Ended December 31, 2020

(in thousands, except percentages)

Technology

Professional
Services

$

110,467 

$

78,378 

$

(35,604)

74,863 

(62,473)

15,905 

Total

188,845 

(98,077)

90,768 

$

$

$

803 
75,666 

$

3,453 
19,358 

$

4,256 
95,024 

68 %

68 %

20 %

25 %

48 %

50 %

Year Ended December 31, 2019

(in thousands, except percentages)

Technology

Professional
Services

83,975 
(27,797)
56,178 

200 

— 
56,378 

$

$

67 %

67 %

70,966 
(47,548)
23,418 

968 

108 
24,494 

$

$

33 %

35 %

Total
154,941 
(75,345)
79,596 

1,168 

108 
80,872 

51 %

52 %

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Table of Contents

Revenue

Cost of revenue, excluding depreciation and amortization

Gross profit, excluding depreciation and amortization

Add:

Stock-based compensation

Tender offer payments deemed compensation

(1)

Post-acquisition restructuring costs

(2)

Adjusted Gross Profit

Gross margin, excluding depreciation and amortization

Adjusted Gross Margin

Year Ended December 31, 2018
(in thousands, except percentages)

Technology

Professional
Services

$

57,224 

$

55,350 

$

(19,429)

37,795 

78 

28 

(40,423)

14,927 

480 

284 

— 
37,901 

$

337 
16,028 

$

$

66 %

66 %

27 %

29 %

Total

112,574 

(59,852)

52,722 

558 

312 

337 
53,929 

47 %

48 %

__________________
(1) Tender offer payments deemed compensation relate to employee compensation from repurchases of common stock at a price in excess of its estimated fair value. For additional details refer

to Note 13 in the consolidated financial statements.

(2) Post-acquisition restructuring costs related to severance charges following the acquisition of Medicity.

Adjusted Technology Gross Margin increased from 67% for the year ended December 31, 2019 to 68% for the year ended December 31, 2020. This
year-over-year performance was mainly driven by existing customers paying higher technology access fees from contractual, built-in escalators, without
the corresponding increase in hosting costs, offset partially by headwinds due to the continued costs associated with transitioning a portion of our customer
base to third-party hosted data centers. We expect Adjusted Technology Gross Margin to fluctuate and potentially decline in the near term, primarily due to
additional costs associated with transitioning customers from on-premise and our managed data centers to third-party hosted data centers with Microsoft
Azure.

Adjusted Professional Services Gross Margin decreased from 35% for the year ended December 31, 2019 to 25% for the year ended December 31,
2020,  due  primarily  to  temporary  professional  services  discounts  provided  to  support  our  customers  through  the  near-term  financial  strain  they  have
experienced related to COVID-19, a lower utilization rate of our professional services team members, and some shift in the mix of professional services
delivered. Our  professional  services  are  comprised  of  data  and  analytics  services,  domain  expertise  services,  outsourcing  services,  and  implementation
services.  The  majority  of  our  professional  services  revenue  is  generated  from  data  and  analytic  services  and  domain  expertise  services,  which  are  the
highest gross margin professional services we provide. The delivery mix among all of our services in a given period can lead to fluctuations in our Adjusted
Professional Services Gross Margin. Adjusted Professional Services Gross Margin may fluctuate on a quarterly basis and will likely decline in the near
term due to changes in the mix of services we provide and the amount of operational overhead required to deliver our services.

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Adjusted EBITDA

Adjusted EBITDA is a non-GAAP financial measure that we define as net loss adjusted for interest and other expense, net, loss on extinguishment of
debt, income tax provision (benefit), depreciation and amortization, stock-based compensation, tender offer payments deemed compensation, acquisition
transaction costs, change in fair value of contingent consideration liabilities, duplicate headquarters rent expense, and post-acquisition restructuring costs
when  they  are  incurred.  We  believe  Adjusted  EBITDA  is  useful  in  evaluating  our  operating  performance  compared  to  that  of  other  companies  in  our
industry, as this metric generally eliminates the effects of certain items that may vary from company to company for reasons unrelated to overall operating
performance.

The following is a reconciliation of our net loss to Adjusted EBITDA for the years ended December 31, 2020, 2019, and 2018:

Net loss
Add:

Interest and other expense, net
Loss on extinguishment of debt
Income tax provision (benefit)
Depreciation and amortization
Stock-based compensation
Acquisition-related transaction costs
Change in fair value of contingent consideration liabilities
Duplicate headquarters rent expense
Tender offer payments deemed compensation

(4)

(1)

(3)

(2)

Post-acquisition restructuring costs

(5)

Adjusted EBITDA

Year Ended December 31,

2020

2019
(in thousands)

2018

$

(115,017) $

(60,096) $

(61,984)

11,572 
8,514 
(1,194)
18,725 
37,957 
2,670 
14,088 
1,398 

— 

3,419 
1,670 
142 
9,212 
17,844 
— 
— 
— 

— 

2,024 
— 
(135)
7,412 
4,198 
— 
— 
— 

8,318 

— 
(21,287) $

446 
(27,363) $

2,114 
(38,053)

$

__________________
(1) Acquisition transaction costs relate to legal, diligence, and other third-party fees incurred as part of the acquisitions of Able Health, Healthfinch, and Vitalware. For additional details refer to

Note 2 in our consolidated financial statements.

(2) The change in fair value of contingent consideration liabilities relates to changes in the estimated fair value of shares of our common stock that will be issued if certain performance targets

for Able Health, Healthfinch, and Vitalware are met during the respective earn-out periods. For additional details refer to Note 7 in our consolidated financial statements.

(3) Duplicate rent expense for our corporate headquarters relocation. For additional details refer to Note 9 in our consolidated financial statements.
(4) Tender offer payments deemed compensation relate to employee compensation from repurchases of common stock at a price in excess of its estimated fair value. For additional details refer

to Note 13 in the consolidated financial statements.

(5) Post-acquisition restructuring costs relate to severance charges following the 2018 acquisition of Medicity.

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Item 7. Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations

The  following  discussion  and  analysis  of  our  financial  condition  and  results  of  operations  should  be  read  in  conjunction  with  our  consolidated
financial  statements  and  the  accompanying  notes  included  elsewhere  in  this  Annual  Report  on  Form  10-K.  This  discussion  contains  forward-looking
statements that involve risks and uncertainties. Our actual results could differ materially from those forward-looking statements below. Factors that could
cause or contribute to those differences include, but are not limited to, those identified below and those discussed in the sections titled “Risk Factors” and
"Special Note Regarding Forward-Looking Statements" included elsewhere in this Annual Report on Form 10-K.

A discussion regarding our financial condition and results of operations for the year ended December 31, 2020 compared to the year ended December
31, 2019 is presented below. A discussion regarding our financial condition and results of operations for the year ended December 31, 2019 compared to
the year ended December 31, 2018 is included under “Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations” in our
prior year Form 10-K filed on February 28, 2020.

Overview

We  are  a  leading  provider  of  data  and  analytics  technology  and  services  to  healthcare  organizations.  Our  Solution  comprises  a  cloud-based  data
platform, analytics software, and professional services expertise. Our customers, which are primarily healthcare providers, use our Solution to manage their
data,  derive  analytical  insights  to  operate  their  organizations,  and  produce  measurable  clinical,  financial,  and  operational  improvements.  We  envision  a
future where all healthcare decisions are data informed.

Health Catalyst was founded in 2008 by healthcare analytics industry pioneers. Our founders and team developed the initial version of our Solution,
consisting of an early version of our data platform, select analytics accelerators, and professional services expertise. From the beginning, our Solution has
been focused on enabling our mission: to be the catalyst for massive, measurable, data-informed healthcare improvement. We currently employ more than
1,000 team members.

Highlights from the years ended December 31, 2020, 2019, and 2018 include:

•
For the years ended December 31, 2020, 2019, and 2018, our total revenue was $188.8 million, $154.9 million, and $112.6 million, respectively.
The growth in revenue was primarily due to revenue from new customers, including customers of our recent acquired entities, and existing customers
paying higher technology access fees from contractual, annual escalators.

•

For the years ended December 31, 2020, 2019, and 2018, we incurred net losses of $115.0 million, $60.1 million, and $62.0 million, respectively.

For  the  years  ended  December  31,  2020,  2019,  and  2018,  our  Adjusted  EBITDA  was  $(21.3)  million,  $(27.4)  million,  and  $(38.1)  million,

•
respectively.

See “Selected Consolidated Financial and Other Data—Reconciliation of Non-GAAP Financial Measures” for more information about this financial
measure, including the limitations of such measure and a reconciliation to the most directly comparable measure calculated in accordance with GAAP. See
“Key Factors Affecting Our Performance” for more information about important opportunities and challenges related to our business.

On July 29, 2019, we closed our IPO in which we issued and sold 8,050,000 shares of common stock at a price to the public of $26.00 per share for

aggregate net proceeds of $190.0 million after deducting underwriting discounts and commissions and offering expenses payable by us.

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COVID-19 Impact

In March 2020, the World Health Organization declared COVID-19 a global pandemic. This pandemic, which has continued to spread, and the related
adverse  public  health  developments,  including  orders  to  shelter-in-place,  travel  restrictions,  and  mandated  business  closures,  have  adversely  affected
workforces,  organizations,  governments,  customers,  economies,  and  financial  markets  globally,  leading  to  an  economic  downturn  and  increased  market
volatility. It has also disrupted the normal operations of many businesses, including ours. COVID-19 has disrupted and we believe will continue to disrupt
the normal operations of our customers, which are primarily healthcare providers. Given the unknown timeline and the near-term uncertainty of COVID-19
on our business, there continues to be uncertainty as to the extent to which the global COVID-19 pandemic may adversely impact our business operations,
financial performance, and results of operations at this time. The ongoing COVID-19 surge, coupled alongside vaccine rollout logistics, likely indicate that
our  country  and  national  healthcare  system  will  be  under  some  amount  of  continued  strain  over  the  coming  months.  That  said,  we  continue  to  be
encouraged  as  we  witness  meaningful  evidence  that  the  healthcare  provider  ecosystem  is  significantly  better  equipped  and  prepared  to  respond  to  the
ongoing pandemic, including through its treatment efficacy, supply chain logistics, capacity planning, and broader operational optimization. Lastly, we see
additional reasons for optimism over the near-to-medium term, as we begin to witness early signs of progress on vaccine rollout logistics.

We are fortunate to have a highly recurring revenue model in which greater than 90% of our revenue is recurring in nature. As such, we expect that the
near-term impact of COVID-19 on our total revenue will be relatively muted, as evidenced by our revenue performance for the year ended December 31,
2020. Additionally, we benefit from a high level of technology revenue predictability, especially our DOS subscription customers that typically have built-
in,  contractual  technology  revenue  escalators.  We  also  have  developed  a  number  of  technology  and  services  solutions  designed  specifically  to  support
healthcare providers during the COVID-19 pandemic. Importantly, since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, our customers’ overall usage of our data
platform  has  increased  meaningfully.  Additionally,  we  have  seen  usage  of  our  COVID-19-specific  products  shift  from  those  focused  on  COVID-19
preparedness to those focused on financial recovery and planning analytics in areas such as elective procedures, ambulatory care, and revenue cycle. Given
these  factors,  we  have  seen  minimal  impact  on  our  technology  dollar-based  retention  as  a  result  of  COVID-19  and  would  anticipate  similar  dynamics
moving forward.

Regarding our professional services, we continue to see high levels of engagement of our team member base, who remain engaged on both COVID-
19-recovery work as well as focusing on more general clinical, financial, and operational improvement work. That said, the financial strain imposed by
COVID-19 on a number of our customers has led to a meaningfully lower professional services dollar-based retention than we have achieved historically.
The primary drivers for the decrease in our Adjusted Professional Services Gross Margin from 35% for the year ended December 31, 2019 to 25% for the
year ended December 31, 2020 include the lower professional services dollar-based retention mentioned above, temporary professional services discounts
provided to support our customers through the near-term financial strain they have experienced related to COVID-19, as well as some shift in the mix of
professional services delivered.

We added nine net new DOS subscription customers during the year ended December 31, 2020. In the first half of 2020, given the significant impact of
COVID-19 on our healthcare provider end market, the number of first half new customer additions was meaningfully lower than we originally anticipated
entering the year. As we entered the second half of 2020, we were pleased to see healthcare organizations adjusting well to the "new normal" operating
environment, with COVID-19 highlighting the need for a more robust, commercial-grade data and analytics solution. Likewise, given the financial strain
imposed by the pandemic, prospective customers have shown an increased focus on revenue and cost optimization analytics, from which we believe we are
well  positioned  to  benefit.  On  the  other  hand,  the  COVID-19  pandemic  continued  to  create  some  near-term  financial  uncertainty,  making  some  health
systems more cautious in their near-term purchasing decisions. Given these operating dynamics, in the second half of 2020 we experienced similar overall
pipeline conversion rates to the second half of 2019.

Any negative impact to 2020 total revenue caused by the COVID-19 pandemic has also resulted in a negative impact to our 2020 Adjusted EBITDA.
We have and continue to plan to partially offset any negative total revenue impact through cost containment efforts, resulting in less of a negative Adjusted
EBITDA impact compared to the negative total revenue impact.

Importantly, in our response to the COVID-19 pandemic, we remain centrally committed to our team members, ensuring they stay at the center of the

Health Catalyst Flywheel. As such, any cost containment efforts implemented will have a bias towards non-headcount related items.

Over  the  long  run,  as  we  get  through  the  COVID-19  pandemic  and  healthcare  organizations'  operations  begin  to  normalize,  we  continue  to  be
optimistic that the pandemic will serve as an overall tailwind in the industry’s adoption of data and analytics. At the health system level, we are seeing
meaningful evidence that COVID-19 is highlighting the need for a commercial-grade data and analytics solution to replace patchwork homegrown systems.

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Our Business Model

We offer our Solution to a variety of healthcare organizations, primarily in the United States, including academic medical centers, integrated delivery
networks,  community  hospitals,  large  physician  practices,  ACOs,  health  information  exchanges,  health  insurers,  and  other  risk-bearing  entities.  We
categorize our customer count into two primary categories: DOS Subscription Customers and Other Customers. DOS Subscription Customers are defined
as customers who access our DOS platform via a technology subscription contract. Other Customers generally include DOS non-subscription customers
and other customers from historical acquisitions. As of December 31, 2020, 2019, and 2018, we had 74, 65, and 50 DOS Subscription Customers with
active  subscriptions,  respectively.  As  of  December  31,  2020,  we  served  over  300  Other  Customers  compared  to  65  as  of  December  31,  2019.  The
significant increase in Other Customers from 2019 to 2020 was primarily due to our acquisitions of Able Health, Healthfinch, and Vitalware.

We  derive  substantially  all  of  our  revenue  through  subscriptions  for  use  of  our  technology  and  professional  services  on  a  recurring  basis.  In  2020,
greater than 90% of our total revenue was recurring in nature. Customers pay for our technology primarily on a subscription basis for our entire technology
suite or for pieces of our technology (e.g., DOS-only). We generally provide access to our technology and deliver professional services to customers on a
recurring basis, with our technology invoiced upfront annually or quarterly and our professional services invoiced monthly. Most of our technology and
professional services contracts have up to a three-year term, of which the vast majority are terminable after one year upon 90 days' notice. As we increase
the use cases we address at a given customer, we have the opportunity to upsell incremental technology and services. We have demonstrated an ability to
upsell technology and services to our customer base over time as evidenced by a Dollar-based Retention Rate of 102%, 109%, and 107% for the years
ended December 31, 2020, 2019, and 2018, respectively.

The  primary  costs  incurred  to  deliver  our  technology  are  hosting  fees  and  headcount-related  costs  associated  with  our  cloud  services  and  support
teams. Hosting fees are related to providing our technology through a cloud-based environment hosted primarily by Microsoft Azure. However, we also
operate a private data center where certain customers are hosted and have deployed DOS on-premise to a small number of customers. Over time, we plan to
migrate our on-premise and private data center customers to Azure-hosted environments, increasing our technology cost of revenue. We have experienced
and  expect  to  continue  to  experience  operational  inefficiencies  associated  with  managing  multiple  hosting  providers,  resulting  in  a  headwind  against
Adjusted Technology Gross Margin. The primary costs incurred to deliver our professional services are the salaries, benefits, and other headcount-related
costs of our team members.

We delineate our sales organization by new customer acquisition and existing customer retention and expansion. Selling efforts to new customers vary.
Many of our new customers engage with us broadly for multiple use cases, requiring buy-in during the sales cycle across the C-suite. Alternatively, in some
instances, we engage with a customer in a single-use case. After we demonstrate measurable improvements, we work with our customers to expand the
utilization of our Solution to other use cases or enterprise-wide. The average sales cycle for a new customer is approximately one year, and that timeline
can vary materially. Because of our vertical focus on the healthcare industry, we believe our sales and marketing resources can be deployed more efficiently
than at horizontally-focused companies that provide technology and services to multiple industries. Over the past few years, we have invested in growth
infrastructure by adding to our sales operations and marketing teams, which are built to help us scale over the long term.

We have demonstrated a consistent track record of innovation through research and development over time as evidenced by our new product features
and new product offerings. This innovation is driven by feedback we glean from our customers, professional services teams, and the market generally. Our
investments in product development have been focused on increasing the capabilities of our Solution and expanding the number of use cases we address for
our customers.

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Key Business Metrics

We  regularly  review  a  number  of  metrics,  including  the  following  key  financial  metrics,  to  manage  our  business  and  evaluate  our  operating

performance compared to that of other companies in our industry:

Total revenue

Adjusted Technology Gross Profit

Adjusted Technology Gross Margin

Adjusted Professional Services Gross Profit

Adjusted Professional Services Gross Margin

Total Adjusted Gross Profit

Total Adjusted Gross Margin

Adjusted EBITDA

Year Ended December 31,

2020

2019

2018

(in thousands, except percentages)

188,845 

$

154,941 

$

75,666 

68 %

19,358 

25 %

95,024 

50 %

(21,287)

$

$

$

56,378 

67 %

24,494 

35 %

80,872 

52 %

(27,363)

$

$

$

112,574 

37,901 

66 %

16,028 

29 %

53,929 

48 %

(38,053)

$

$

$

$

We monitor the key metrics set forth in the preceding table to help us evaluate trends, establish budgets, measure the effectiveness and efficiency of
our  operations,  and  determine  employee  incentives.  We  discuss  Adjusted  Gross  Profit,  Adjusted  Gross  Margin,  and  Adjusted  EBITDA  in  more  detail
below.

Adjusted Gross Profit and Adjusted Gross Margin

Adjusted Gross Profit is a non-GAAP financial measure that we define as revenue less cost of revenue, excluding depreciation and amortization and
excluding  stock-based  compensation,  tender  offer  payments  deemed  compensation,  and  post-acquisition  restructuring  costs.  We  define Adjusted  Gross
Margin as our Adjusted Gross Profit divided by our revenue. We believe Adjusted Gross Profit and Adjusted Gross Margin are useful to investors as they
eliminate  the  impact  of  certain  non-cash  expenses  and  allow  a  direct  comparison  of  these  measures  between  periods  without  the  impact  of  non-
cash  expenses  and  certain  other  non-recurring  operating  expenses.  We  believe  these  non-GAAP  measures  are  useful  in  evaluating  our  operating
performance  compared  to  that  of  other  companies  in  our  industry,  as  these  metrics  generally  eliminate  the  effects  of  certain  items  that  may  vary  from
company to company for reasons unrelated to overall profitability.

See above for information regarding the limitations of using our Adjusted Gross Profit and Adjusted Gross Margin as financial measures and for a

reconciliation of revenue to our Adjusted Gross Profit, the most directly comparable financial measure calculated in accordance with GAAP.

Adjusted EBITDA

Adjusted  EBITDA  is  a  non-GAAP  financial  measure  that  we  define  as  net  loss  adjusted  for  interest  and  other  expense,  net,  loss  on  debt
extinguishment,  income  tax  provision  (benefit),  depreciation  and  amortization,  stock-based  compensation,  acquisition  transaction  costs,  change  in  fair
value  of  contingent  consideration,  duplicate  headquarters  rent  expense,  tender  offer  payments  deemed  compensation,  and  post-acquisition  restructuring
costs when they are incurred. We believe Adjusted EBITDA provides investors with useful information on period-to-period performance as evaluated by
management  and  comparison  with  our  past  financial  performance.  We  believe  Adjusted  EBITDA  is  useful  in  evaluating  our  operating  performance
compared  to  that  of  other  companies  in  our  industry,  as  this  metric  generally  eliminates  the  effects  of  certain  items  that  may  vary  from  company  to
company for reasons unrelated to overall operating performance.

See “Selected Consolidated Financial and Other Data - Reconciliation of Non-GAAP Financial Measures” for information regarding the limitations of
using our Adjusted EBITDA as a financial measure and for a reconciliation of our net loss to Adjusted EBITDA, the most directly comparable financial
measure calculated in accordance with GAAP.

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Other Key Metrics

We also regularly monitor and review the number of DOS Subscription Customers and Dollar-based Retention Rate as shown in the following tables:

DOS Subscription Customers

DOS Subscription Customers

As of December 31,

2020

2019

2018

74 

65 

50 

Since  2016,  our  primary  contracting  model  is  a  subscription-based  contract  to  our  DOS  platform,  analytics  applications,  and  professional  services.
Given  how  fundamental  DOS  is  to  our  Solution  and  because  the  vast  majority  of  our  total  revenue  is  derived  from  DOS  Subscription  Customers,  we
believe our DOS Subscription Customer count, which represents customers with active subscriptions at period end, is the best representation of our market
penetration  and  the  growth  of  our  business.  Our  2020  DOS  Subscription  Customer  additions  of  nine  was  lower  than  the  historical  annual  number  of
additions due to the impact of COVID-19 on our sales achievement during the first half of 2020.

Dollar-based Retention Rate

Dollar-based Retention Rate

Year Ended December 31,

2020

2019

2018

102 %

109 %

107 %

We calculate our Dollar-based Retention Rate as of a period end by starting with the sum of the Annual Recurring Revenue (ARR) from customers as
of the date 12 months prior to such period end (prior period ARR). We then calculate the sum of the ARR from these same customers as of the current
period end (current period ARR). Current period ARR includes any upsells and also reflects contraction or attrition over the trailing twelve months but
excludes revenue from new customers added in the current period. We then divide the current period ARR by the prior period ARR to arrive at our Dollar-
based  Retention  Rate.  We  calculate  ARR  for  each  customer  as  the  expected  monthly  recurring  revenue  of  our  customers  as  of  the  last  day  of  a  period
multiplied  by  12.  Because  our  primary  business  model  is  to  contract  for  our  DOS  platform,  analytics  applications,  and  professional  services,  acquired
customers that have not subscribed to DOS are not included in the Dollar-based Retention Rate metrics.

Given our high level of technology revenue predictability, we would anticipate minimal impact on our technology dollar-based retention as a result of
COVID-19,  however,  the  financial  strain  imposed  by  COVID-19  on  a  number  of  our  customers  has  led  to  a  meaningfully  lower  professional  services
dollar-based  retention  in  2020,  and  thus  a  lower  total  Dollar-based  Retention  Rate,  compared  to  what  we  have  achieved  historically.  Given  that  our
customer base will be under some amount of continued pandemic-related financial and operational uncertainty over the coming months, we anticipate that
there will be continued strain on our professional services dollar-based retention in the near-term.

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Key Factors Affecting Our Performance

We  believe  that  our  future  growth,  success,  and  performance  are  dependent  on  many  factors,  including  those  set  forth  below.  While  these  factors
present significant opportunities for us, they also represent the challenges that we must successfully address in order to grow our business and improve our
results of operations.

•

•

•

•

•

•

Impact  of  COVID-19  pandemic.  The  COVID-19  pandemic  has  adversely  affected  workforces,  organizations,  governments,  customers,
economies,  and  financial  markets  globally,  leading  to  an  economic  downturn  and  increased  market  volatility.  It  has  also  disrupted  the  normal
operations  of  many  businesses,  including  ours.  This  outbreak,  as  well  as  intensified  measures  undertaken  to  contain  the  spread  of  COVID-19,
could decrease healthcare industry spending, adversely affect demand for our technology and services, cause one or more of our customers to file
for  bankruptcy  protection  or  go  out  of  business,  cause  one  or  more  of  our  customers  to  fail  to  renew,  terminate,  or  renegotiate  their  contracts,
affect the ability of our sales team to travel to potential customers and the ability of our professional services teams to conduct in-person services
and trainings, impact expected spending from new customers, negatively impact collections of accounts receivable, and harm our business, results
of operations, and financial condition. It is not possible for us to predict the duration or magnitude of the adverse results of the outbreak and its
effects on our business, results of operations, or financial condition at this time.

Add new customers. We  believe  that  our  ability  to  increase  our  customer  base  will  enable  us  to  drive  growth.  Our  potential  customer  base  is
generally  in  the  early  stages  of  data  and  analytics  adoption  and  maturity.  We  expect  to  further  penetrate  the  market  over  time  as  potential
customers  invest  in  commercial  data  and  analytics  solutions.  As  one  of  the  first  data  platform  and  analytics  vendors  focused  specifically  on
healthcare  organizations,  we  have  an  early-mover  advantage  and  strong  brand  awareness.  Our  customers  are  large,  complex  organizations  who
typically have long procurement cycles which may lead to declines in the pace of our new customer additions.

Leverage recent product and services offerings to drive expansion. We believe that our ability to expand within our customer base will enable us
to  drive  growth.  Over  the  last  few  years,  we  have  developed  and  deployed  several  new  analytics  applications  including  CORUS,  Touchstone,
Patient Safety Monitor, Population Builder, and others. Because we are in the early stages of certain of our applications’ lifecycles and maturity,
we do not have enough information to know the impact on revenue growth by upselling these applications and associated services to current and
new customers.

Impact of acquisitions. We have acquired multiple companies over the last few years, including the Medicity acquisition in June 2018, the Able
Health acquisition in February 2020, the Healthfinch acquisition in July 2020, and the Vitalware acquisition in September 2020. The historical and
go-forward revenue growth profiles of these businesses may vary from our core DOS Subscription Customers, thus impacting our overall growth
rate. Specifically, Medicity customers have generated a lower Dollar-based Retention Rate than DOS Subscription Customers and we expect flat
to  declining  revenue  from  Medicity  customers  in  the  foreseeable  future.  If  our  cross-sell  efforts  and  technology  integration  strategies  are
successful related to the recent acquisitions, this could offset revenue declines from Medicity customers. As we integrate the teams acquired via
our recent acquisitions, we have also incurred integration-related costs and duplicative costs that could impact our operating cost profile in the
near-term.

Changing  revenue  mix.  Our  technology  and  professional  services  offerings  have  materially  different  gross  margin  profiles.  While  our
professional  services  help  our  customers  achieve  measurable  improvements  and  make  them  stickier,  they  have  lower  gross  margins  than
technology revenue. In 2020, our technology revenue and professional services revenue represented 58% and 42% of total revenue, respectively.
Changes in our revenue mix between the two offerings would impact future Total Adjusted Gross Margin. Furthermore, changes within the types
of professional services we offer over time can have a material impact on our Adjusted Professional Services Gross Margin, impacting our future
Total Adjusted Gross Margin. See “Selected Consolidated Financial and Other Data—Reconciliation of Non-GAAP Financial Measures” for more
information.

Transitions to Microsoft Azure as DOS hosting provider. We incur hosting fees related to providing DOS through a cloud-based environment
hosted by Microsoft Azure. We also operate a private data center where we host DOS for certain customers and we maintain a small number of
customers  that  have  deployed  DOS  on-premise.  We  are  in  the  process  of  transitioning  customers  we  host  in  our  private  data  center  and  who
deployed DOS on-premise to Azure-hosted environments. The Azure cloud provides customers with more advanced DOS product functionality
and  a  more  seamless  customer  experience;  however,  hosting  customers  in  Azure  is  more  costly  than  our  private  data  center  and  on-premise
deployments on a per-customer basis. This transition will result in higher cost of technology revenue and provide a headwind against increases in
Adjusted Technology Gross Margin.

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Recent Acquisitions

Able Health, Inc.

On February 21, 2020, we acquired Able Health, Inc. (Able Health), a leading software-as-a-service provider of quality and regulatory measurement
tracking  and  reporting  to  healthcare  providers  and  risk-bearing  entities,  in  a  transaction  accounted  for  as  a  business  combination.  We  believe  this
acquisition will strengthen Health Catalyst’s Quality and Regulatory Measures capabilities. The acquisition consideration transferred was $21.5 million and
was comprised of net cash consideration of $15.2 million, Health Catalyst common shares with a fair value of $3.3 million, and contingent consideration
based  on  achievement  of  Able  Health  specified  incremental  customer  billings  for  the  year  ending  December  31,  2020.  The  purchase  resulted  in  Health
Catalyst acquiring 100% ownership in Able Health.

Healthfinch, Inc.

On July 31, 2020, we acquired Healthfinch, Inc. (Healthfinch), which provides a workflow integration engine delivering insights and analytics into
EMR workflows to automate physicians’ ability to close patient care gaps in real-time, in a transaction accounted for as a business combination. We believe
this acquisition will strengthen our existing population health capabilities. The acquisition consideration transferred was $50.5 million and was comprised
of net cash consideration of $16.9 million, Health Catalyst common shares with a fair value of $27.8 million, and contingent consideration based on certain
earn-out  performance  targets  for  Healthfinch  during  an  earn-out  period  that  ends  on  July  31,  2021.  The  purchase  resulted  in  Health  Catalyst  acquiring
100% ownership in Healthfinch.

Vitalware, LLC

On September 1, 2020, we acquired Vitalware, LLC (Vitalware), a provider of revenue workflow optimization and analytics SaaS technology solutions
to healthcare organizations, in a transaction accounted for as a business combination. Vitalware’s flagship offering is a chargemaster management solution
that delivers analytics for the complex regulatory and compliance functions needed by healthcare provider systems. Additionally, Vitalware brings to bear
newer product suites to help health systems capture lost revenue and to support compliance with expanding pricing transparency regulation. The acquisition
consideration transferred was $119.2 million and was comprised of  net  cash  consideration  of  $69.6  million,  Health  Catalyst  common  shares  with  a  fair
value of $41.3 million, and contingent consideration based on certain earn-out performance targets for Vitalware during an earn-out period that ends on
March 31, 2021. The purchase resulted in Health Catalyst acquiring 100% ownership in Vitalware.

Components of Our Results of Operations

Revenue

We  derive  our  revenue  from  sales  of  technology  and  professional  services.  For  the  years  ended  December  31,  2020,  2019,  and  2018,  technology
revenue represented 58%, 54%, and 51% of total revenue, respectively, and professional services revenue represented 42%, 46%, and 49% of total revenue,
respectively.

Technology  revenue.        Technology  revenue  primarily  consists  of  subscription  fees  charged  to  customers  for  access  to  use  our  data  platform  and
analytics applications. We provide customers access to our technology through either an all-access or limited-access, modular subscription. Most of our
subscription contracts are cloud-based and have up to a three-year term, of which the vast majority are terminable after one year upon 90 days' notice. DOS
Subscription Customers that access our technology through an all-access or limited access, modular subscription generally have agreements with built-in
annual escalators for technology access fees. Also included in technology revenue is the maintenance and support we provide, which generally includes
updates and support services.

Professional services revenue.    Professional services revenue primarily includes analytics services, domain expertise services, outsourcing services,
and implementation services. Professional services arrangements typically include a fee for making full-time equivalent (FTE) services available to our
customers on a monthly basis. FTE services generally consist of a blend of analytic engineers, analysts, and data scientists based on the domain expertise
needed to best serve our customers. 

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Deferred revenue

Deferred revenue consists of customer billings in advance of revenue being recognized from our technology and professional services arrangements.
We primarily invoice our customers for technology arrangements annually or quarterly in advance. Amounts anticipated to be recognized within one year
of  the  balance  sheet  date  are  recorded  as  deferred  revenue  and  the  remaining  portion  is  recorded  as  deferred  revenue,  net  of  current  portion  on  the
consolidated balance sheets.

Cost of revenue, excluding depreciation and amortization

Cost of technology revenue.    Cost of technology revenue primarily consists of costs associated with hosting and supporting our technology, including

third-party cloud computing and hosting costs, contractor costs, and salary and related personnel costs for our cloud services and support teams.

Although  we  expect  cost  of  technology  revenue  to  increase  in  absolute  dollars  as  we  transition  customers  to  third-party  hosted  data  centers  with
Microsoft  Azure  and  increase  headcount  to  accommodate  growth,  we  anticipate  cost  of  technology  revenue  as  a  percentage  of  technology  revenue  will
generally decrease over the long term. We expect cost of technology revenue as a percentage of technology revenue to fluctuate and potentially increase in
the near term, primarily due to additional costs associated with transitioning customers from on-premise and our managed data centers to Microsoft Azure.

Cost of professional services revenue.    Cost of professional services revenue consists primarily of costs related to delivering our team’s expertise in
analytics,  strategic  advisory,  improvement,  and  implementation  services.  These  costs  primarily  include  salary  and  related  personnel  costs,  travel-related
costs,  and  outside  contractor  costs.  We  expect  cost  of  professional  services  revenue  to  increase  in  absolute  dollars  as  we  increase  headcount  to
accommodate growth.

Operating expense

Sales  and  marketing.        Sales  and  marketing  expenses  primarily  include  salary  and  related  personnel  costs  for  our  sales,  marketing,  and  account
management  teams,  lead  generation,  marketing  events,  including  our  Healthcare  Analytics  Summit  (HAS),  marketing  programs,  and  outside  contractor
costs associated with the sale and marketing of our offerings.

We plan to continue to invest in sales and marketing to grow our customer base, expand in new markets, and increase our brand awareness. The trend
and timing of sales and marketing expenses will depend in part on the timing of our expansion into new markets and marketing campaigns. We expect that
sales and marketing expenses will increase in absolute dollars in future periods, but decrease as a percentage of our revenue over the long term. Our sales
and marketing expenses may fluctuate as a percentage of our revenue from period to period due to the timing and extent of these expenses.

Research  and  development.        Research  and  development  expenses  primarily  include  salary  and  related  personnel  costs  for  our  data  platform  and
analytics applications teams, subscriptions, and outside contractor costs associated with the development of products. We have developed an open, flexible,
and scalable data platform. We plan to continue to invest in research and development to develop new solutions and enhance our applications library. We
expect that research and development expenses will increase in absolute dollars in future periods, but decrease as a percentage of our revenue over the long
term. Our research and development expenses may fluctuate as a percentage of our revenue from period to period due to the timing and extent of these
expenses.

General and administrative.    General and administrative expenses primarily include salary and related personnel costs for our legal, finance, people
operations,  IT,  and  other  administrative  teams,  including  certain  executives.  General  and  administrative  expenses  also  include  facilities,  subscriptions,
corporate insurance, outside legal, accounting, and directors' fees.

Due  to  the  closing  of  our  IPO  on  July  29,  2019,  we  incurred  and  expect  to  continue  to  incur  additional  costs  as  a  result  of  operating  as  a  public
company, including costs related to compliance and reporting obligations of public companies, and increased costs for insurance, investor relations, and
corporate governance. As a result, we expect our general and administrative expenses to increase in absolute dollars for the foreseeable future, but decrease
as a percentage of our revenue over the long term. Our general and administrative expenses may fluctuate as a percentage of our revenue from period to
period due to the timing and extent of these expenses.

Depreciation and amortization.    Depreciation and amortization expenses are primarily attributable to our capital investment and consist of fixed asset

depreciation, amortization of intangibles considered to have definite lives, and amortization of capitalized internal-use software costs.

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Interest and other expense, net

Interest and other expense, net primarily consists of interest income from our investment holdings and interest expense. Interest expense is primarily
attributable  to  the  Notes,  our  now  extinguished  term  loan,  and  imputed  interest  on  acquisition-related  consideration  payable.  It  also  includes  the
amortization of discounts on debt and amortization of deferred financing costs related to our various debt arrangements.

Income tax provision (benefit)

Income tax provision (benefit) consists of U.S. federal, state, and foreign income taxes. Because of the uncertainty of the realization of the deferred tax
assets, we have a full valuation allowance for deferred tax assets, including net operating loss carryforwards (NOLs) and tax credits related primarily to
research and development.

As of December 31, 2020, we had federal and state NOLs of $419.6 million and $334.6 million, respectively, which will begin to expire for federal and
state tax purposes in 2032 and 2023, respectively. Our existing NOLs may be subject to limitations arising from ownership changes and, if we undergo an
ownership change, our ability to utilize our NOLs and tax credits could be further limited by Sections 382 and 383 of the Code. Future changes in our stock
ownership, many of which are outside of our control, could result in an ownership change under Sections 382 and 383 of the Code. Our NOLs and tax
credits may also be limited under similar provisions of state law.

On  March  27,  2020,  the  Coronavirus  Aid,  Relief  and  Economic  Security  Act  (the  CARES  Act)  was  enacted  and  signed  into  U.S.  law  to  provide
economic relief to individuals and businesses facing economic hardship as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. Changes in tax laws or rates are accounted
for in the period of enactment. We are continuing to analyze these legislative developments and believe that the income tax provisions of the CARES Act
do  not  have  a  significant  impact  on  our  current  taxes,  deferred  taxes,  or  uncertain  tax  positions.  The  CARES  Act  also  provides  for  the  deferral  of  an
employer’s portion of social security payroll taxes for the remainder of 2020. Under the CARES Act, half of the deferred amount will have to be paid in
each of December 2021 and December 2022. We began deferring the social security payroll tax match in April 2020.

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Results of Operations

The  following  tables  set  forth  our  consolidated  results  of  operations  data  and  such  data  as  a  percentage  of  total  revenue  for  each  of  the  periods

indicated:

Revenue:

Technology

Professional services

Total revenue

Cost of revenue, excluding depreciation and amortization shown below:

Technology

(1)(2)

Professional services

(1)(2)(3)

Total cost of revenue, excluding depreciation and amortization

Operating expenses:

Sales and marketing

(1)(2)(3)

Research and development

(1)(2)(3)

General and administrative

(1)(2)(3)(4)(5)(6)

Depreciation and amortization

Total operating expenses

Loss from operations

Loss on extinguishment of debt

Interest and other expense, net

Loss before income taxes

Income tax provision (benefit)

Net loss

__________________
(1)

Includes stock-based compensation expense, as follows:

Stock-Based Compensation Expense:
Cost of revenue, excluding depreciation and amortization:

Technology
Professional services

Sales and marketing
Research and development
General and administrative

Total

70

2020

Year Ended December 31,
2019

2018

(in thousands)

$

110,467  $

83,975  $

78,378 

188,845 

35,604 

62,473 

98,077 

55,411 

53,517 

59,240 

18,725 

186,893 

(96,125)

(8,514)

(11,572)

(116,211)

70,966 

154,941 

27,797 

47,548 

75,345 

47,284 

46,252 

31,713 

9,212 

134,461 

(54,865)

(1,670)

(3,419)

(59,954)

(1,194)
(115,017) $

$

142 
(60,096) $

57,224 

55,350 

112,574 

19,429 

40,423 

59,852 

44,123 

38,592 

22,690 

7,412 

112,817 

(60,095)

— 

(2,024)

(62,119)

(135)
(61,984)

2020

Year Ended December 31,
2019
(in thousands)

2018

$

$

803 
3,453 
13,093 
8,069 
12,539 
37,957 

$

$

200 
968 
3,811 
4,841 
8,024 
17,844 

$

$

78 
480 
1,514 
787 
1,339 
4,198 

Table of Contents

(2)

Includes tender offer payments deemed compensation expense, as follows:

Tender Offer Payments Deemed Compensation Expense:
Cost of revenue, excluding depreciation and amortization:

Technology
Professional services

Sales and marketing
Research and development
General and administrative

Total

(3) Includes post-acquisition restructuring costs, as follows:

Post-Acquisition Restructuring Costs:
Cost of revenue, excluding depreciation and amortization:

Professional services

Sales and marketing
Research and development
General and administrative

Total

(4) Includes acquisition transaction costs, as follows:

Acquisition Transaction Costs:
General and administrative

(5) Includes the change in fair value of contingent consideration liabilities, as follows:

Change in Fair Value of Contingent Consideration:
General and administrative

(6) Includes duplicate headquarters rent expense, as follows:

Duplicate Headquarters Rent Expense:
General and administrative

71

2020

Year Ended December 31,
2019

2018

(in thousands)

— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 

$
$
$
$
$
$

— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 

$

$

2020

Year Ended December 31,
2019

2018

(in thousands)

— 
— 
— 
— 
— 

$

$

108 
306 
32 
— 
446 

$

$

28 
284 
3,967 
906 
3,133 
8,318 

337 
780 
513 
484 
2,114 

2020

Year Ended December 31,
2019

2018

(in thousands)

2,670 

$

— 

$

— 

2020

Year Ended December 31,
2019

2018

(in thousands)

14,088 

$

— 

$

— 

2020

Year Ended December 31,
2019

2018

(in thousands)

1,398 

$

— 

$

— 

$

$

$

$

$

$

$

Table of Contents

Revenue:

Technology

Professional services

Total revenue

Cost of revenue, excluding depreciation and amortization shown below:

Technology

Professional service

Total cost of revenue, excluding depreciation and amortization

Operating expenses:

Sales and marketing

Research and development

General and administrative

Depreciation and amortization

Total operating expenses

Loss from operations

Loss on extinguishment of debt

Interest and other expense, net

Loss before income taxes

Income tax provision (benefit)

Net loss

Discussion of the Years Ended December 31, 2020 and 2019

Revenue

2020

Year Ended December 31,
2019

2018

58 %

42 

100 

19 

33 

52 

29 

28 

31 

10 

98 

(50)

(5)

(6)

(61)

(1)
(60)%

54 %

46 

100 

18 

31 

49 

31 

30 

20 

6 

87 

(36)

(1)

(2)

(39)

— 
(39)%

51 %

49 

100 

17 

36 

53 

39 

34 

20 

7 

100 

(53)

— 

(2)

(55)

— 
(55)%

Revenue:

Technology

Professional services

Total revenue

Percentage of revenue:

Technology

Professional services

Total

Year Ended December 31,

2020

2019

$ Change

% Change

(in thousands, except percentages)

$

$

110,467 

78,378 
188,845 

$

$

83,975 

70,966 
154,941 

$

$

26,492 

7,412 
33,904 

32 %

10 %

22 %

58 %

42 
100 %

54 %

46 
100 %

Total  revenue  was  $188.8  million  for  the  year  ended  December  31,  2020,  compared  to  $154.9  million  for  the  year  ended  December  31,  2019,  an

increase of $33.9 million, or 22%.

Technology revenue was $110.5 million, or 58% of total revenue, for the year ended December 31, 2020, compared to $84.0 million, or 54% of total
revenue,  for  the  year  ended  December  31,  2019.  The  revenue  growth  was  primarily  from  new  DOS  Subscription  Customers,  acquired  technology
customers, and revenue from existing customers paying higher technology access fees from contractual, annual escalators, and new offerings of expanded
support services.

Professional services revenue was $78.4 million, or 42% of total revenue, for the year ended December 31, 2020, compared to $71.0 million, or 46%
of  total  revenue,  for  the  year  ended  December  31,  2019.  The  professional  services  revenue  growth  is  primarily  due  to  implementation,  analytics,
outsourcing,  and  other  improvement  services  being  provided  to  new  DOS  Subscription  Customers  and  expanded  deployment  of  services  with  existing
customers. This growth was partially offset by temporary professional services discounts provided to support our customers through the near-term financial
strain they have experienced related to COVID-19.

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Table of Contents

Cost of revenue, excluding depreciation and amortization

Cost of revenue, excluding depreciation and amortization:

Technology

Professional services

Total cost of revenue, excluding depreciation and amortization

Percentage of total revenue

Year Ended December 31,

2020

2019

$ Change

% Change

(in thousands, except percentages)

$

$

35,604 

62,473 
98,077 

$

$

27,797 

47,548 
75,345 

$

$

52 %

49 %

7,807 

14,925 
22,732 

28 %

31 %

30 %

Cost of technology revenue, excluding depreciation and amortization, was $35.6 million for the year ended December 31, 2020, compared to $27.8
million for the year ended December 31, 2019, an increase of $7.8 million, or 28%. The increase in cost of technology revenue was primarily due to $4.2
million  in  increased  cloud  computing  and  hosting  costs  largely  from  the  current  year  acquisitions  and  the  expanded  use  of  Microsoft  Azure  to  serve
existing and new customers, and an increase of $2.3 million in salary and related personnel costs from an increase in cloud services and support headcount.

Cost  of  professional  services  revenue  was  $62.5  million  for  the  year  ended  December  31,  2020,  compared  to  $47.5  million  for  the  year  ended
December 31, 2019, an increase of $14.9 million, or 31%. This increase was primarily due to a $13.4 million increase in salary and related personnel costs
from  additional  professional  services  headcount  and  additional  stock-based  compensation  of  $2.5  million,  which  were  partially  offset  by  a  decrease  in
travel-related expenses of $1.8 million.

Operating Expenses

Sales and marketing

Sales and marketing

Percentage of total revenue

Year Ended December 31,

2020

2019

$ Change

% Change

(in thousands, except percentages)

$

55,411 

$

47,284 

$

8,127 

17 %

29 %

31 %

Sales and marketing expenses were $55.4 million for the year ended December 31, 2020, compared to $47.3 million for the year ended December 31,
2019,  an  increase  of  $8.1  million,  or  17%.  The  increase  was  primarily  due  to  a  $9.3  million  increase  in  stock-based  compensation  and  a  $0.9  million
increase in the provision for credit losses, which were partially offset by a decrease in travel-related expenses of $3.0 million.

Sales and marketing expense as a percentage of total revenue decreased from 31% in the year ended December 31, 2019 to 29% in the year ended

December 31, 2020.

Research and development

Research and development

Percentage of total revenue

Year Ended December 31,

2020

2019

$ Change

% Change

(in thousands, except percentages)

$

53,517 

$

46,252 

$

7,265 

16 %

28 %

30 %

Research  and  development  expenses  were  $53.5  million  for  the  year  ended  December  31,  2020,  compared  to  $46.3  million  for  the  year  ended
December 31, 2019, an increase of $7.3 million, or 16%. The increase was primarily due to an increase of $3.4 million in stock-based compensation and an
increase of $4.0 million in salary and related personnel costs from additional development team headcount.

Research and development expense as a percentage of revenue decreased from 30% in the year ended December 31, 2019 to 28% in the year ended

December 31, 2020.

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Table of Contents

General and administrative

General and administrative

Percentage of total revenue

Year Ended December 31,

2020

2019

$ Change

% Change

(in thousands, except percentages)

$

59,240 

$

31,713 

$

27,527 

87 %

31 %

20 %

General  and  administrative  expenses  were  $59.2  million  for  the  year  ended  December  31,  2020,  compared  to  $31.7  million  for  the  year
ended December 31, 2019, an increase of $27.5 million, or 87%. The increase was primarily due to increases of $14.1 million in change in fair value of
contingent consideration liabilities, $4.5 million in stock-based compensation, $2.7 million in acquisition-related transaction costs, $2.6 million in salary
and related personnel costs from additional headcount, $1.4 million in duplicate rent expense, and $1.4 million in corporate insurance costs.

General  and  administrative  expense  as  a  percentage  of  revenue  increased  from  20%  in  the  year  ended  December  31,  2019  to  31%  in  the  year

ended December 31, 2020.

Depreciation and amortization

Depreciation and amortization

Percentage of total revenue

Year Ended December 31,

2020

2019

$ Change

% Change

(in thousands, except percentages)

$

18,725 

$

9,212 

$

9,513 

103 %

10 %

6 %

Depreciation  and  amortization  expenses  were  $18.7  million  for  the  year  ended  December  31,  2020,  compared  to  $9.2  million  for  the  year

ended December 31, 2019, an increase of $9.5 million, or 103%. This increase was primarily due to the amortization of acquired intangible assets.

Depreciation and amortization expense as a percentage of revenue increased from 6% in the year ended December 31, 2019 to 10% in the year ended

December 31, 2020.

Loss on extinguishment of debt

Loss on extinguishment of debt

__________________
(1) Not meaningful.

Year Ended December 31,
2019
2020

$ Change

% Change

$

(8,514) $

(1,670) $

(6,844)

(1)

n/m

(in thousands, except percentages)

On April 14, 2020, we used $57.0 million of proceeds from the Note Offering to prepay in full all outstanding indebtedness, including prepayment
penalties, under the Credit Agreement and terminate the Credit Agreement. We recorded a loss on extinguishment of debt of approximately $8.5 million
during  the  year  ended  December  31,  2020,  including  approximately  $7.0  million  of  repayment  fees  and  $1.5  million  unamortized  debt  discounts  and
issuance costs related to the OrbiMed term loan.

On  February  6,  2019,  we  entered  into  the  OrbiMed  Credit  Facility  that  established  a  senior  term  loan  facility  of  up  to  $80.0  million  under  certain
conditions and we simultaneously borrowed $50.0 million. The use of proceeds from the OrbiMed senior term loan included an immediate repayment of
our  $20.0  million  term  loan  from  SVB  that  required  a  prepayment  premium  of  $0.5  million  and  the  write-off  of  deferred  debt  issuance  costs  of  $1.2
million, resulting in a $1.7 million loss on extinguishment of debt.

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Table of Contents

Interest and other expense, net

Interest income

Interest expense

Other income (expense)

Total interest and other expense, net

Year Ended December 31,

2020

2019

$ Change

% Change

(in thousands, except percentages)

$

$

2,094  $

(13,716)

50 
(11,572) $

2,810  $

(6,261)

32 
(3,419) $

(716)

(7,455)

18 
(8,153)

(25)%

119 %

56 %

238 %

Interest  and  other  expense,  net  increased  $8.2  million,  or  238%,  for  the  year  ended  December  31,  2020  compared  to  the  year  ended  December  31,
2019.  This  increase  is  primarily  due  to  an  increase  in  interest  expense  of  $7.5  million  due  to  the  increase  in  net  borrowings  resulting  from  the  Notes
Offering that occurred in April 2020.

Income tax provision (benefit)

Income tax provision (benefit)

__________________
(1) Not meaningful.

Year Ended December 31,

2020

2019

$ Change

% Change

$

(1,194) $

142  $

(1,336)

(1)

n/m

(in thousands, except percentages)

Income tax provision (benefit) consists of current and deferred taxes for U.S. federal, state, and foreign income taxes. On December 22, 2017, federal
tax legislation was enacted that included lowering the U.S. corporate income tax rate to 21% effective in 2018. We remeasured certain deferred tax assets
and liabilities based on the tax rates at which they are expected to reverse in the future, which is generally 21%. As we had a full valuation allowance on
deferred tax assets, the allowance was adjusted accordingly based on the remeasured deferred tax asset and liability position. As a result, the federal tax
legislation had a limited impact on our income tax provision (benefit).

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Liquidity and Capital Resources

As of December 31, 2020, we had cash, cash equivalents, and short-term investments of $270.9 million, which were held primarily for working capital
purposes.  Our  cash  equivalents  and  short-term  investments  are  comprised  primarily  of  money  market  funds,  U.S.  treasury  notes,  commercial  paper,
corporate bonds, and asset-backed securities.

Since inception, we have financed our operations primarily from the proceeds we received through private sales of equity securities, payments received
from customers under technology and professional services arrangements, borrowings under our loan and security agreements, and our recent IPO. Our
future capital requirements will depend on many factors, including our pace of new customer growth and expanded customer relationships, technology and
professional services renewal activity, and the timing and extent of spend to support the expansion of sales, marketing, and development activities. In the
event that additional financing is required from outside sources, we may not be able to raise it on terms acceptable to us, or at all. If we are unable to raise
additional capital when desired, our business, results of operations, and financial condition would be adversely affected.

We believe our existing cash, cash equivalents and marketable securities and amounts available under our credit facilities will be sufficient to meet our

working capital and capital expenditure needs over at least the next 12 months, though we may require additional capital resources in the future.

Convertible Senior Notes

On April 14, 2020, we issued $230.0 million in aggregate principal amount of 2.50% Convertible Senior Notes due 2025 (the Notes), pursuant to an
Indenture  dated  April  14,  2020,  with  U.S.  Bank  National  Association,  as  trustee,  in  a  private  offering  to  qualified  institutional  buyers.  We  received  net
proceeds from the sale of the Notes of $222.5 million, after deducting the initial purchasers’ discounts and offering expenses payable by us.

The Notes are senior, unsecured obligations and accrue interest payable semiannually in arrears on April 15 and October 15 of each year, beginning on
October 15, 2020, at a rate of 2.50% per year. The Notes will mature on April 15, 2025, unless earlier converted, redeemed, or repurchased. The Notes are
convertible into cash, shares of our common stock, or a combination of cash and shares of our common stock, with the form of consideration determined at
our election. The conversion rate is initially 32.6797 shares of our common stock per $1,000 principal amount of Notes (which is equivalent to an initial
conversion price of approximately $30.60 per share of our common stock).

Capped Calls

On April 8, 2020, concurrently with the pricing of the Notes, we entered into privately negotiated capped call transactions (the Base Capped Calls)
with certain financial institutions, or option counterparties. In addition, in connection with the initial purchasers’ exercise in full of their option to purchase
additional Notes, on April 9, 2020, we entered into additional capped call transactions (together with the Base Capped Calls, the Capped Calls) with each
of the option counterparties. We used approximately $21.6 million of the net proceeds from the Note Offering to pay the cost of the Capped Calls. The
Capped Calls have initial cap prices of $42.00 per share, subject to certain adjustments. The Capped Calls are expected generally to reduce the potential
dilution to our common stock upon any conversion of Notes and/or offset any cash payments we are required to make in excess of the principal amount of
converted Notes, as the case may be, with such reduction and/or offset subject to the cap price.

Refer to Note 11 of our consolidated financial statements for additional details regarding the private offering of the Notes and the Capped Calls.

Initial Public Offering

On  July  29,  2019,  we  closed  our  IPO  in  which  we  issued  and  sold  8,050,000  shares  (inclusive  of  the  underwriters’  over-allotment  option  to
purchase 1,050,000 shares, which was exercised on July 25, 2019) of common stock at $26.00 per share. We received net proceeds of $194.6 million after
deducting underwriting discounts and commissions and before deducting offering costs of $4.6 million.

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OrbiMed financings

On February 6, 2019, we entered into the Credit Agreement with OrbiMed that established a senior term loan facility of up to $80.0 million under
certain conditions. The contractual interest rate is the higher of LIBOR plus 7.5% and 10.0%. On February 6, 2019, we borrowed $50.0 million under the
Credit Agreement with principal payments due beginning in 2023, and we simultaneously repaid our $20.0 million term loan from SVB in full. In addition,
we repaid in full the outstanding balance of $1.3 million under the SVB revolving line of credit. Additionally, on February 6, 2019, we sold 437,787 shares
of our Series F redeemable convertible preferred stock for a purchase price of $12.2 million. The effect of the OrbiMed debt proceeds, the Series F stock
issuance, and the repayment of the SVB term loan resulted in a net increase in cash, cash equivalents, and short-term investments of $38.7 million, net of
fees  and  debt  prepayment  premiums.  On  April  14,  2020,  we  used  $57.0  million  of  proceeds  from  the  Note  Offering  to  prepay  in  full  all  outstanding
indebtedness, including prepayment penalties, under the Credit Agreement with OrbiMed, dated February 6, 2019, as amended, and terminate the Credit
Agreement.

SVB revolving line of credit

In  June  2016,  we  signed  a  Loan  and  Security  Agreement  with  SVB  which  established  a  revolving  line  of  credit  based  on  a  formula  amount.  On
February 6, 2019, we amended the Loan Agreement with SVB which reduced the revolving line of credit to a current maximum of $5.0 million with an
obligation to maintain a minimum of $5.0 million cash or cash equivalents on deposit with SVB to maintain the assurance of future credit availability. The
line may be increased to $10.0 million upon request and approval by SVB. The maturity date of the revolving line of credit was amended to be February 6,
2021.  On  April  8,  2020,  we  entered  into  a  Pay-Off  Letter  Agreement  with  SVB,  pursuant  to  which  we  paid  to  SVB  immaterial  termination  costs,
representing all amounts due and owing under the Loan Agreement, dated as of October 6, 2017.

Cash Flows

The following table summarizes our cash flows for the years ended December 31, 2020, 2019, and 2018:

Net cash used in operating activities

Net cash (used in) provided by investing activities

Net cash provided by financing activities

Effect of exchange rate changes on cash and cash equivalents

Net increase (decrease) in cash and cash equivalents

Operating Activities

Year Ended December 31,

2020

2019

2018

(in thousands)

$

$

(26,148) $

(32,184) $

(40,296)

(82,565)

182,609 

26 
73,922  $

(209,602)

231,381 

6 

(10,399) $

21,403 

24,346 

— 
5,453 

Our largest source of operating cash flows is cash collections from our customers for technology and professional services arrangements. Our primary

uses of cash from operating activities are for employee-related expenses, marketing expenses, and technology costs.

For the year ended December 31, 2020, net cash used in operating activities was $26.1 million, which included a net loss of $115.0 million. Non-cash
charges primarily consisted of $18.7 million in depreciation and amortization of property, equipment, and intangible assets, $38.0 million in stock-based
compensation, $14.1 million in change in fair value of contingent consideration liabilities, $8.5 million of loss from the extinguishment of debt, and $8.1
million in amortization of debt discount and issuance costs.

For the year ended December 31, 2019, net cash used in operating activities was $32.2 million, which included a net loss of $60.1 million. Non-cash
charges  primarily  consisted  of  $9.2  million  in  depreciation  and  amortization  of  property,  equipment,  and  intangible  assets,  $17.8  million  in  stock-based
compensation, $1.7 million of loss from the extinguishment of debt, and $1.1 million in amortization of debt discount and issuance costs.

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For  the  year  ended  December  31,  2018,  net  cash  used  in  operating  activities  was  $40.3  million,  which  included  a  net  loss  of  $62.0  million.  Non-
cash charges primarily consisted of $4.2 million in stock-based compensation and $7.4 million in depreciation and amortization of property, equipment, and
intangible assets. The 2018 net loss also included an $8.3 million charge that was paid in association with the repurchase of common stock at a price in
excess of its estimated fair value as part of the 2018 tender offer that is further described in Note 13 to the audited consolidated financial statements. The
tender offer cash payments are not expected to be recurring in future periods.

Investing Activities

Net cash used in investing activities for the year ended December 31, 2020 of $82.6 million was primarily due to $189.5 million in purchases of short-
term investments, $101.7 million used in current year business acquisitions, and $9.0 million in purchases of property, equipment, and intangible assets,
reduced by the $219.1 million sale and maturity of short-term investments.

Net  cash  used  in  investing  activities  for  the  year  ended  December  31,  2019  of  $209.6  million  was  primarily  due  to  $256.0  million  in  purchases  of
short-term investments and $4.3 million in purchases of property, equipment, and intangible assets, reduced by the $50.7 million sale and maturity of short-
term investments.

Net cash provided by investing activities for the year ended December 31, 2018 of $21.4 million was primarily due to $37.9 million provided from the
sale and maturity of short-term investments, reduced by $14.0 million used to purchase short-term investments and $2.5 million in purchases of property,
equipment, and intangible assets.

Financing Activities

Net cash provided by financing activities for the year ended December 31, 2020 of $182.6 million was primarily the result of $222.5 million in net
proceeds from the private offering of the Notes, $36.3 million in stock option exercise proceeds, and $4.3 million in proceeds from our ESPP, reduced by
the $57.0 million payoff of the OrbiMed Credit Facility, $21.7 million used to purchase Capped Calls, including issuance costs, and the $1.6 million in
payments of acquisition-related obligations.

Net cash provided by financing activities for the year ended December 31, 2019 of $231.4 million was primarily the result of $194.6 million in IPO
proceeds, net of underwriters’ discounts and commissions, $47.2 million in net proceeds drawn under the OrbiMed Credit Facility, $12.1 million in net
proceeds from the sale and issuance of Series F redeemable convertible preferred stock, $2.7 million in stock option exercise proceeds, and $3.0 million in
proceeds from our ESPP, reduced by the $21.8 million payoff of the SVB debt, $4.6 million in payments of deferred offering costs, and $1.7 million in
payments of acquisition-related obligations.

Net cash provided by financing activities for the year ended December 31, 2018 of $24.3 million was primarily the result of $34.0 million in proceeds
from the issuance of Series E redeemable convertible preferred stock, $10.0 million in proceeds drawn under the SVB Debt Agreements and $3.0 million in
stock  option  exercise  proceeds,  reduced  by  an  $8.7  million  repurchase  of  our  common  stock,  and  $13.9  million  in  payments  of  acquisition-related
obligations.

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Contractual Obligations and Commitments

The following table presents a summary of our payments due under contractual arrangements as of December 31, 2020:

Convertible senior notes

(1)

Operating lease obligations

(2)

Acquisition-related consideration

Total

Total

2021

2022-2023

2024-2025

Thereafter

Payments Due by Period

(in thousands)

$

$

230,000  $

33,719 

2,000 
265,719  $

—  $

3,882 

2,000 
5,882  $

—  $

230,000  $

6,789 

— 
6,789  $

6,004 

— 
236,004  $

— 

17,044 

— 
17,044 

__________________
(1) On April 14, 2020, we issued $230.0 million in aggregate principal amount of 2.50% Convertible Senior Notes due 2025, pursuant to an Indenture dated April 14, 2020, with U.S. Bank
National Association, as trustee, in a private offering to qualified institutional buyers. We received net proceeds from the sale of the Notes of $222.5 million, after deducting the initial
purchasers’ discounts and offering expenses payable by us.

(2) We lease our facilities under long-term operating leases, which expire at various dates through 2031.

The contractual commitment amounts in the table above are associated with agreements that are enforceable and legally binding and that specify all
significant  terms,  including  fixed  or  minimum  services  to  be  used,  fixed,  minimum  or  variable  price  provisions  and  the  approximate  timing  of  the
transaction.

In  the  ordinary  course  of  business,  we  enter  into  agreements  of  varying  scope  and  terms  pursuant  to  which  we  agree  to  indemnify  customers  or
business partners and other parties with respect to certain matters, including, but not limited to, losses arising out of the breach of such agreements, services
to be provided by us or from data breaches, or intellectual property infringement claims made by third parties. No demands have been made upon us to
provide indemnification under such agreements and there are no claims that we are aware of that could have a material effect on our consolidated financial
statements.

Off-Balance Sheet Arrangements

As of December 31, 2020, we did not have any relationships with unconsolidated organizations or financial partnerships, such as structured finance or
special purpose entities that would have been established for the purpose of facilitating off-balance sheet arrangements or other contractually narrow or
limited purposes.

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Critical Accounting Policies and Estimates

Our consolidated financial statements are prepared in accordance with U.S. GAAP. The preparation of these consolidated financial statements requires
management to make estimates, assumptions, and judgments that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities and disclosure of contingent assets
and  liabilities  at  the  date  of  the  financial  statements,  and  the  reported  amounts  of  revenue  and  expenses  during  the  applicable  periods.  We  base  our
estimates, assumptions, and judgments on our knowledge and experience about past and current events and on various other factors that we believe to be
reasonable under the circumstances. Different assumptions and judgments would change the estimates used in the preparation of our consolidated financial
statements, which, in turn, could change the results from those reported. We evaluate our estimates, assumptions, and judgments on an ongoing basis.

The  critical  accounting  estimates,  assumptions,  and  judgments  that  we  believe  have  the  most  significant  impact  on  our  consolidated  financial

statements are described below.

Revenue Recognition

We  derive  our  revenues  primarily  from  technology  subscriptions  and  professional  services.  We  determine  revenue  recognition  by  applying  the

following steps:

•

•

Identification of the contract, or contracts, with a customer;

Identification of the performance obligations in the contract;

• Determination of the transaction price;

• Allocation of the transaction price to the performance obligations in the contract; and

•

Recognition of revenue when, or as, we satisfy the performance obligation.

We recognize revenue net of any taxes collected from customers and subsequently remitted to governmental authorities.

Technology Revenue

Technology revenue primarily consists of subscription fees charged to customers for access to use our technology. We provide customers access to our
technology through either an all-access or limited-access, modular subscription. The majority of our subscription arrangements are cloud-based and do not
provide customers the right to take possession of the technology or contain a significant penalty if the customer were to take possession of the technology.
Revenue  from  cloud-based  subscriptions  is  recognized  ratably  over  the  contract  term  beginning  on  the  date  that  the  service  is  made  available  to  the
customer. Most of our subscription contracts have up to a three-year term, of which the vast majority are terminable after one year upon 90 days notice.

Subscriptions that allow the customer to take software on-premise without significant penalty are treated as time-based licenses. These arrangements
generally include access to technology, access to unspecified future products and maintenance and support. Revenue for upfront access to the technology
library is recognized at a point in time when the technology is made available to the customer. Revenue for access to unspecified future products included
in time-based license subscriptions is recognized ratably over the contract term beginning on the date that the access is made available to the customer.

We also have certain perpetual license arrangements. Revenue from these arrangements is recognized at a point in time upon delivery of the software.
Technology revenue also includes maintenance and support revenue which generally includes bug fixes, updates, and support services. Revenue related to
maintenance and support is recognized over the contract term beginning on the date that the service is made available to the customer.

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Professional Services Revenue

Professional  services  revenue  primarily  includes  data  and  analytics  services,  domain  expertise  services,  outsourcing  services,  and  implementation
services. Professional services arrangements typically include a fee for making FTE services available to our customers on a monthly basis. FTE services
generally  consist  of  a  blend  of  analytic  engineers,  analysts,  and  data  scientists  based  on  the  domain  expertise  needed  to  best  serve  our  customers.
Professional services are typically considered distinct from the technology offerings and revenue is generally recognized as the service is provided using
the “right to invoice” practical expedient.

Contracts with Multiple Performance Obligations

Many  of  our  contracts  include  multiple  performance  obligations.  We  account  for  performance  obligations  separately  if  they  are  capable  of  being
distinct and distinct within the context of the contract. In these circumstances, the transaction price is allocated to separate performance obligations on a
relative standalone selling price basis. We determine standalone selling prices based on the observable price a good or service is sold for separately when
available. In cases where standalone selling prices are not directly observable, based on information available, we utilize the expected cost plus a margin,
adjusted  market  assessment,  or  residual  estimation  method.  We  consider  all  information  available  including  our  overall  pricing  objectives,  market
conditions, and other factors, which may include the value of contracts, customer demographics, and the types of users.

Standalone  selling  prices  are  not  directly  observable  for  our  all-access  and  limited-access  technology  arrangements,  which  are  composed  of  cloud-
based  subscriptions,  time-based  licenses,  and  perpetual  licenses.  For  these  technology  arrangements,  we  use  the  residual  estimation  method  due  to  the
limited number of standalone transactions and/or prices that are highly variable.

Variable Consideration

We  have  also  entered  into  at-risk  and  shared  savings  arrangements  with  certain  customers  whereby  we  receive  variable  consideration  based  on  the
achievement of measurable improvements which may include cost savings or performance against metrics. For these arrangements, we estimate revenue
using the most likely amount that we will receive. Estimates are based on our historical experience and best judgment at the time to the extent it is probable
that  a  significant  reversal  of  revenue  recognized  will  not  occur.  Due  to  the  nature  of  our  arrangements,  certain  estimates  may  be  constrained  until  the
uncertainty is further resolved.

Business Combinations

The results of businesses acquired in a business combination are included in our consolidated financial statements from the date of the acquisition.
Purchase accounting results in assets and liabilities of an acquired business generally being recorded at their estimated fair values on the acquisition date.
Any excess consideration over the fair value of identifiable assets acquired and liabilities assumed is recognized as goodwill.

We perform valuations of assets acquired and liabilities assumed on each acquisition accounted for as a business combination in order to record the
tangible and intangible assets acquired and liabilities assumed based on our best estimate of fair value. Determining the fair value of assets acquired and
liabilities assumed requires management to use significant judgment and estimates including the selection of valuation methodologies, estimates of future
revenue  and  cash  flows,  discount  rates,  and  selection  of  comparable  companies.  Significant  estimation  is  required  in  determining  the  fair  value  of  the
customer-related  intangible  assets  and  technology-related  intangible  assets.  The  significant  estimation  is  primarily  due  to  the  judgmental  nature  of  the
inputs  to  the  valuation  models  used  to  measure  the  fair  value  of  these  intangible  assets,  as  well  as  the  sensitivity  of  the  respective  fair  values  to  the
underlying significant assumptions. We typically use the income approach or cost approach to measure the fair value of intangible assets. The significant
assumptions used to form the basis of the estimates included the number of engineer hours required to develop technology, expected revenue including
revenue growth rates, rate and timing of obsolescence, royalty rates and earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization (“EBITDA”) margin
used in the estimate for customer relationships, and backlog. Many of these significant assumptions were forward-looking and could be affected by future
economic  and  market  conditions.  We  engage  the  assistance  of  valuation  specialists  in  concluding  on  fair  value  measurements  in  connection  with
determining fair values of assets acquired and liabilities assumed in a business combination.

Transaction  costs  associated  with  business  combinations  are  expensed  as  incurred  and  are  included  in  general  and  administrative  expense  in  our

consolidated statements of operations and comprehensive loss.

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Goodwill

We record goodwill as the difference between the aggregate consideration paid for a business combination and the fair value of the identifiable net
tangible  and  intangible  assets  acquired.  Goodwill  includes  the  know-how  of  the  assembled  workforce,  the  ability  of  the  workforce  to  further  improve
technology and product offerings, customer relationships, and the expected cash flows resulting from these efforts. Goodwill may also include expected
synergies  resulting  from  the  complementary  strategic  fit  these  businesses  bring  to  existing  operations.  Goodwill  is  assessed  for  impairment  annually  or
more frequently if indicators of impairment are present or circumstances suggest that impairment may exist.

Our first step in the goodwill impairment test is a qualitative analysis of factors that could be indicators of potential impairment. Next, if a quantitative
analysis is necessary, we compare the fair value of the reporting unit with its carrying amount, including goodwill. If the fair value of the reporting unit
exceeds  its  carrying  amount,  the  goodwill  of  the  reporting  unit  is  not  considered  impaired.  If  the  carrying  amount  of  the  reporting  unit  exceeds  its  fair
value, we would recognize an impairment charge for the amount by which the carrying amount exceeds the reporting unit’s fair value.

Stock-Based Compensation

Stock-based awards, including stock options and RSUs, are measured and recognized in the consolidated financial statements based on the fair value of
the  award  on  the  grant  date.  For  awards  subject  to  performance  conditions,  we  record  expense  when  the  performance  condition  becomes  probable.  We
record forfeitures of stock-based awards as the actual forfeitures occur.

We  have  issued  two  types  of  employee  stock-based  awards,  standard  and  two-tier.  Our  standard  stock-based  awards  vest  solely  on  a  service-based
condition.  For these awards, we recognize stock-based compensation expense on a straight-line basis over the vesting period. Two-tier employee stock-
based  awards  contain  both  a  service-based  condition  and  performance  condition,  defined  as  the  earlier  of  (i)  an  acquisition  or  change  in  control  of  the
company or (ii) upon the occurrence of an initial public offering by the Company. A change in control event and effective registration event are not deemed
probable until consummated; accordingly, no expense is recorded related to two-tier stock-based awards until the performance condition becomes probable
of occurring.

Awards  that  contain  both  service-based  and  performance  conditions  are  recognized  using  the  accelerated  attribution  method  once  the  performance
condition is probable of occurring. The service-based condition is generally a service period of four years. Upon closing our IPO, we recorded cumulative
share-based compensation expense of approximately $6.0 million using the accumulated attribution method for two-tier employee stock-based awards for
which the service condition had been satisfied at that date.

The grant date fair value of RSUs is determined using the market closing price of our common stock on the date of grant. We estimate the fair value of
our stock option awards on the grant date using the Black-Scholes option-pricing model. This requires the input of highly subjective assumptions, including
the expected term of stock options, the expected volatility of the price of our common stock, risk-free interest rates, and the expected dividend yield of our
common  stock.  The  assumptions  used  in  our  option-pricing  model  represent  our  best  estimates.  These  estimates  involve  inherent  uncertainties  and  the
application of management’s judgment. If factors change and different assumptions are used, our stock-based compensation expense could be materially
different in the future. The resulting fair value, net of actual forfeitures, is recognized on a straight-line basis over the period during which an employee is
required to provide service in exchange for the award.

Stock-based compensation expense related to purchase rights issued under the 2019 Health Catalyst Employee Stock Purchase Plan (ESPP) is based on
the Black-Scholes option-pricing model fair value of the estimated number of awards as of the beginning of the offering period. Stock-based compensation
expense is recognized using the straight-line method over the offering period.

These assumptions used in the Black-Scholes option-pricing model, other than the fair value of our common stock, are estimated as follows:

•

Expected volatility.        Since  a  public  market  for  our  common  stock  did  not  exist  prior  to  our  IPO  and,  therefore,  we  did  not  have  a  sufficient
trading  history  of  our  common  stock,  we  estimated  the  expected  volatility  based  on  the  volatility  of  similar  publicly-held  entities  (guideline
companies) over a period equivalent to the expected term of the pre-IPO awards. In evaluating the similarity of guideline companies to us, we
considered factors such as industry, stage of life cycle, size, and financial leverage. We intend to primarily use the volatility history of the share
price of our common stock as it becomes available.

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•

•

•

Expected term.    We estimate the expected term using the simplified method, as we do not have sufficient historical exercise activity to develop
reasonable expectations about future exercise patterns and post-vesting employment termination behavior. The simplified method calculates the
average period the stock options are expected to remain outstanding as the midpoint between the vesting date and the contractual expiration date
of the award.

Risk-free  interest  rate.        The  risk-free  interest  rate  is  based  on  the  U.S.  Treasury  yield  curve  in  effect  at  the  time  of  grant  for  maturities
corresponding with the expected term of the award.

Expected dividend yield.    We have never declared or paid any dividends and do not presently plan to pay dividends in the foreseeable future.
Consequently, we use an expected dividend yield of zero.

Prior to the adoption of ASU No. 2018-07, Compensation — Stock Compensation (ASU 2018-17), which simplifies the accounting for non-employee
share-based  payment  transactions,  the  fair  value  measurement  date  for  non-employee  awards  was  the  date  the  performance  of  services  was  completed.
Upon adoption of ASU 2018-07 on January 1, 2019, the measurement date for non-employee awards is the date of grant. The compensation expense for
non-employees is recognized, without changes in the fair value of the award, in the same period and in the same manner as though we had paid cash for the
services, which is typically the vesting period of the respective award.

We will continue to use judgment in evaluating the assumptions related to our stock-based compensation on a prospective basis. As we continue to
accumulate additional data related to our common stock, we may have refinements to our estimates, which could materially impact our future stock-based
compensation expense.

Recent Accounting Pronouncements

See “Description of Business and Summary of Significant Accounting Policies” in Note 1 to our audited consolidated financial statements included

within Item 8 in this Annual Report on Form 10-K for more information.

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Item 7A. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures about Market Risk

We are exposed to certain market risks in the ordinary course of our business. Market risk represents the risk of loss that may impact our financial
position due to adverse changes in financial market prices and rates. Our market risk exposure is primarily a result of fluctuations in interest rates but may
include  foreign  currency  exchange  risk  and  inflation  in  the  future.  There  were  no  material  quantitative  changes  in  market  risk  exposures  between  the
current and preceding fiscal years.

Interest Rate Risk

We  had  cash,  cash  equivalents,  and  short-term  investments  of  $270.9  million  and  $228.3  million  as  of  December  31,  2020  and  2019,  respectively,

which are held for working capital purposes. We do not make investments for trading or speculative purposes.

Our cash equivalents and short-term investments are subject to market risk due to changes in interest rates. Fixed-rate securities may have their market
value adversely affected due to a rise in interest rates, while floating rate securities may produce less income than expected if interest rates fall. Due in part
to these factors, our future investment income may fluctuate due to changes in interest rates or we may suffer losses in principal if we are forced to sell
securities that decline in market value due to changes in interest rates. However, because we classify our investments as “available for sale,” no gains or
losses are recognized due to changes in interest rates unless such securities are sold prior to maturity or declines in fair value are determined to be other-
than-temporary.

As of December 31, 2020 and 2019, a hypothetical 100 basis point change in interest rates would not have had a material impact on the value of our
cash equivalents or investment portfolio. Fluctuations in the value of our cash equivalents and investment portfolio caused by a change in interest rates
(gains  or  losses  on  the  carrying  value)  are  recorded  in  other  comprehensive  income  and  are  realized  only  if  we  sell  the  underlying  securities  prior  to
maturity.

On April 14, 2020, we issued $230.0 million in aggregate principal amount Convertible Senior Notes due 2025 (the Notes), in a private placement to
qualified institutional buyers exempt from registration under the Securities Act (the Note Offering). The Notes have a fixed annual interest rate of 2.50%,
and, therefore, we do not have economic interest rate exposure on the Notes. However, the values of the Notes are exposed to interest rate risk. Generally,
the fair value of our fixed interest rate Notes will increase as interest rates fall and decrease as interest rates rise. We carry the Notes as face value less
unamortized discount on our Consolidated Balance Sheets, and we present the fair value for required disclosure purposes only.

Foreign Currency Exchange Risk

Our reporting currency is the U.S. dollar, and the functional currency of our subsidiaries is typically their local currency. Our results of operations and
cash flows are subject to fluctuations due to changes in foreign currency exchange rates, particularly changes in the Singapore Dollar. Due to the relatively
small size of our international operations to date, our foreign currency exposure has been fairly limited and thus we have not instituted a hedging program.
We are considering the costs and benefits of initiating such a program and may in the future hedge balances and transactions denominated in currencies
other than the U.S. dollar as we expand international operations.

Today, our international sales contracts are generally denominated in U.S. dollars, while our international operating expenses are often denominated in

local currencies. In the future, an increasing portion of our international sales contracts may be denominated in local currencies.

Additionally, as we expand our international operations a larger portion of our operating expenses will be denominated in local currencies. Therefore,

fluctuations in the value of the U.S. dollar and foreign currencies may affect our results of operations when translated into U.S. dollars.

Inflation Risk

We do not believe that inflation has had a material effect on our business, results of operations or financial condition. Nonetheless, if our costs were to
become subject to significant inflationary pressures, we may not be able to fully offset such higher costs. Our inability or failure to do so could harm our
business, results of operations, or financial condition.

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Item 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data.

HEALTH CATALYST, INC.

Index to Consolidated Financial Statements

Reports of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

Health Catalyst, Inc. Consolidated Balance Sheets

Health Catalyst, Inc. Consolidated Statements of Operations

Health Catalyst, Inc. Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Loss

Health Catalyst, Inc. Consolidated Statements of Redeemable Convertible Preferred Stock and Stockholders’ Equity (Deficit)

Health Catalyst, Inc. Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows

Health Catalyst, Inc. Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements

86

90

91

92

93

94

96

85

Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

To the Stockholders and the Board of Directors of Health Catalyst, Inc.

Opinion on the Financial Statements

We have audited the accompanying consolidated balance sheets of Health Catalyst, Inc. (the Company) as of December 31, 2020 and 2019, the related
consolidated  statements  of  operations,  comprehensive  loss,  redeemable  convertible  preferred  stock  and  stockholders’  equity  (deficit)  and  cash  flows  for
each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 2020, and the related notes (collectively referred to as the “consolidated financial statements”). In
our opinion, the consolidated financial statements present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of the Company at December 31, 2020 and
2019,  and  the  results  of  its  operations  and  its  cash  flows  for  each  of  the  three  years  in  the  period  ended  December  31,  2020,  in  conformity  with  U.S.
generally accepted accounting principles.

We  also  have  audited,  in  accordance  with  the  standards  of  the  Public  Company  Accounting  Oversight  Board  (United  States)  (PCAOB),  the  Company's
internal  control  over  financial  reporting  as  of  December  31,  2020,  based  on  criteria  established  in  Internal  Control-Integrated  Framework  issued  by  the
Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (2013 framework) and our report dated February 25, 2021 expressed an unqualified
opinion thereon.

Basis for Opinion

These financial statements are the responsibility of the Company's management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on the Company’s financial
statements  based  on  our  audits.  We  are  a  public  accounting  firm  registered  with  the  PCAOB  and  are  required  to  be  independent  with  respect  to  the
Company in accordance with the U.S. federal securities laws and the applicable rules and regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission and the
PCAOB.

We conducted our audits in accordance with the standards of the PCAOB. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable
assurance  about  whether  the  financial  statements  are  free  of  material  misstatement,  whether  due  to  error  or  fraud.  Our  audits  included  performing
procedures to assess the risks of material misstatement of the financial statements, whether due to error or fraud, and performing procedures that respond to
those risks. Such procedures included examining, on a test basis, evidence regarding the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. Our audits
also included evaluating the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall presentation of the
financial statements. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

Critical Audit Matters

The  critical  audit  matters  communicated  below  are  matters  arising  from  the  current  period  audit  of  the  financial  statements  that  were  communicated  or
required  to  be  communicated  to  the  audit  committee  and  that:  (1)  relate  to  accounts  or  disclosures  that  are  material  to  the  financial  statements  and  (2)
involved our especially challenging, subjective or complex judgments. The communication of critical audit matters does not alter in any way our opinion
on the consolidated financial statements, taken as a whole, and we are not, by communicating the critical audit matters below, providing separate opinions
on the critical audit matters or on the accounts or disclosures to which they relate.

86

 
Description of the Matter

How We Addressed the Matter in Our
Audit

Revenue Recognition – identification of and accounting for performance obligations

As described in Note 3 to the consolidated financial statements, the Company primarily derives their revenues
from  recurring  technology  and  professional  services  subscriptions.  When  the  Company’s  contracts  contain
multiple performance obligations that are determined to be distinct, the performance obligations are accounted
for  separately.  In  such  cases,  the  transaction  price  is  allocated  to  the  distinct  performance  obligations  on  a
standalone  selling  price  basis  and  the  timing  of  revenue  recognition  is  determined  separately  for  each
performance obligation.

Auditing the Company's determination of distinct performance obligations, the allocation of the transaction price
based  on  a  stand-alone  selling  price  and  the  timing  of  revenue  recognition  can  be  challenging.  Judgment  is
involved to determine the distinct performance obligations, the estimation of stand-alone selling price, and the
timing  of  revenue  recognition.  For  example,  there  may  be  nonstandard  terms  and  conditions  or  changes  in
management’s  business  practices  that  can  have  a  material  effect  on  the  distinct  performance  obligations,  the
appropriate stand-alone selling price and the timing of revenue recognition.

We obtained an understanding, evaluated the design and tested the operating effectiveness of controls over the
Company's process to identify the distinct performance obligations, determine the standalone selling prices for
each  performance  obligation,  allocate  the  transaction  price  to  the  performance  obligations  and  determine  the
appropriate timing of revenue recognition for each distinct performance obligation.

Our audit procedures included, among others, testing a sample of contracts. For each contract selection, we read
the  executed  contract  to  assess  management’s  evaluation  of  significant  nonstandard  terms  and  conditions  and
tested the appropriateness of the determination of distinct performance obligations. We also tested the allocation
of  consideration  and  management’s  determination  of  standalone  selling  price  for  performance  obligations  by
assessing the appropriateness of the methodology applied, testing the calculations for mathematical accuracy and
testing selections to corroborate the data underlying the company’s calculations. To test the timing of revenue
recognition and the appropriateness of the methodology employed for each distinct performance obligation, we
tested  the  amounts  recognized  as  revenue  or  recorded  as  deferred  revenue.  Additionally,  we  performed
substantive analytical procedures, including a correlation analysis between revenue, deferred revenue, accounts
receivable and cash. We also tested the accuracy and completeness of relevant underlying data.

87

Description of the Matter

How We Addressed the Matter in Our
Audit

Business Combinations

In  2020,  the  Company  completed  the  acquisitions  of  Able  Health,  Inc.  for  net  consideration  of  $21.5  million,
Healthfinch  Inc.  for  net  consideration  of  $50.5  million  and  Vitalware,  LLC  for  net  consideration  of  $119.2
million.  As  discussed  in  Note  2  to  the  consolidated  financial  statements,  the  Company  accounted  for  these
acquisitions as business combinations. 

Auditing  these  acquisitions  was  complex  due  to  the  significant  estimation  uncertainty  inherent  in  determining
the  fair  values  of  identified  intangible  assets,  which  primarily  consisted  of  developed  technology  of  $33.6
million,  customer  relationships  of  $43.0  million  and  backlog  of  $10.6  million.  The  significant  estimation
uncertainty  was  primarily  due  to  the  sensitivity  of  the  respective  fair  values  to  underlying  assumptions  about
future  performance  of  the  acquired  businesses  and  due  to  the  limited  historical  data  on  which  to  base  these
assumptions.  The  significant  assumptions  used  to  form  the  basis  of  the  estimates  included  the  number  of
engineer hours required to develop technology, expected revenue including revenue growth rates, rate and timing
of  obsolescence,  royalty  rates  and  earnings  before  interest,  taxes,  depreciation  and  amortization  (“EBITDA”)
margin used in the estimate for customer relationships and backlog. Many of these significant assumptions were
forward-looking and could be affected by future economic and market conditions.

We  obtained  an  understanding,  evaluated  the  design  and  tested  the  operating  effectiveness  of  the  Company's
controls over the valuation of intangible assets related to the acquisitions. Specifically, we tested controls over
the  fair  value  measurement  of  the  identified  intangibles,  with  particular  emphasis  on  controls  related  to
identifying and evaluating these significant assumptions. We also tested controls over management’s review of
the valuation methodologies employed.

Our  audit  procedures  included,  among  others,  testing  the  estimated  fair  value  of  the  significant  identifiable
intangibles with involvement of our valuation specialists to assist in evaluating the significant assumptions and
methodologies  used  by  management  in  developing  the  fair  value  estimates  and  testing  the  completeness  and
accuracy  of  the  data  and  calculations  supporting  the  significant  assumptions.  Examples  of  testing  procedures
performed  include  performing  corroborative  calculations  and  sensitivity  analyses,  comparing  estimated
headcount and employee-related and other costs to historical information, detail testing a sample of transactions
selected from base-year revenue amounts and comparing significant rate assumptions to current industry, market
and economic trends and historical results of the Company's business.

/s/ Ernst & Young LLP

We have served as the Company’s auditor since 2012.

Salt Lake City, Utah
February 25, 2021

88

Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

To the Stockholders and the Board of Directors of Health Catalyst, Inc.

Opinion on Internal Control Over Financial Reporting

We have audited Health Catalyst, Inc.’s internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2020, based on criteria established in Internal Control
—Integrated Framework issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (2013 framework) (the COSO criteria). In
our opinion, Health Catalyst, Inc. maintained, in all material respects, effective internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2020, based on
the COSO criteria.

We also have audited, in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States) (PCAOB), the consolidated
balance  sheets  of  Health  Catalyst,  Inc.  as  of  December  31,  2020  and  2019,  the  related  consolidated  statement  of  operations,  comprehensive  loss,
redeemable convertible preferred stock and stockholders’ equity (deficit) and cash flows for each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 2020,
and related notes and our report dated February 25, 2021 expressed an unqualified opinion thereon.

Basis for Opinion

The Company’s management is responsible for maintaining effective internal control over financial reporting and for its assessment of the effectiveness of
internal  control  over  financial  reporting  included  in  the  accompanying  Management’s  Report  on  Internal  Control  Over  Financial  Reporting.  Our
responsibility  is  to  express  an  opinion  on  the  Company’s  internal  control  over  financial  reporting  based  on  our  audit.  We  are  a  public  accounting  firm
registered with the PCAOB and are required to be independent with respect to the Company in accordance with the U.S. federal securities laws and the
applicable rules and regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission and the PCAOB.

We conducted our audit in accordance with the standards of the PCAOB. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable
assurance about whether effective internal control over financial reporting was maintained in all material respects.

Our audit included obtaining an understanding of internal control over financial reporting, assessing the risk that a material weakness exists, testing and
evaluating the design and operating effectiveness of internal control based on the assessed risk, and performing such other procedures as we considered
necessary in the circumstances. We believe that our audit provides a reasonable basis for our opinion.

Definition and Limitations of Internal Control Over Financial Reporting

A company’s internal control over financial reporting is a process designed to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting
and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. A company’s internal control
over financial reporting includes those policies and procedures that (1) pertain to the maintenance of records that, in reasonable detail, accurately and fairly
reflect the transactions and dispositions of the assets of the company; (2) provide reasonable assurance that transactions are recorded as necessary to permit
preparation  of  financial  statements  in  accordance  with  generally  accepted  accounting  principles,  and  that  receipts  and  expenditures  of  the  company  are
being  made  only  in  accordance  with  authorizations  of  management  and  directors  of  the  company;  and  (3)  provide  reasonable  assurance  regarding
prevention or timely detection of unauthorized acquisition, use, or disposition of the company’s assets that could have a material effect on the financial
statements.

Because of its inherent limitations, internal control over financial reporting may not prevent or detect misstatements. Also, projections of any evaluation of
effectiveness  to  future  periods  are  subject  to  the  risk  that  controls  may  become  inadequate  because  of  changes  in  conditions,  or  that  the  degree  of
compliance with the policies or procedures may deteriorate.

/s/ Ernst & Young LLP

Salt Lake City, Utah
February 25, 2021

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HEALTH CATALYST, INC.

Consolidated Balance Sheets

(in thousands, except share and per share data)

(1)

Assets
Current assets:
Cash and cash equivalents
Short-term investments
Accounts receivable, net
Prepaid expenses and other assets
Total current assets
Property and equipment, net
Intangible assets, net
Operating lease right-of-use assets
Other assets
Goodwill

Total assets
Liabilities and stockholders’ equity
Current liabilities:
Accounts payable
Accrued liabilities
Acquisition-related consideration payable

(1)

(1)

Deferred revenue
Operating lease liabilities
Contingent consideration liabilities
Total current liabilities
Long-term debt, net of current portion
Acquisition-related consideration payable, net of current portion
Deferred revenue, net of current portion
Operating lease liabilities, net of current portion
Contingent consideration liabilities, net of current portion
Other liabilities
Total liabilities
Commitments and contingencies (Notes 9 and 17)

Stockholders’ equity:
Preferred stock, $0.001 par value per share; 25,000,000 shares authorized and no shares issued and outstanding as of

December 31, 2020 and 2019

Common stock, $0.001 par value; 500,000,000 shares authorized as of December 31, 2020 and 2019; 43,376,848 and 36,678,854

shares issued and outstanding as of December 31, 2020 and 2019, respectively

Additional paid-in capital
Accumulated deficit
Accumulated other comprehensive income

Total stockholders’ equity

Total liabilities and stockholders’ equity

As of December 31,

2020

2019

91,954  $
178,917 
48,296 
10,632 
329,799 
12,863 
98,921 
24,729 
3,606 
107,822 
577,740  $

5,332  $
16,510 

2,000 
47,145 
2,622 
14,427 
88,036 
168,994 
— 
1,878 
23,669 
16,837 
2,227 
301,641 

18,032 
210,245 
27,570 
8,392 
264,239 
4,295 
25,535 
3,787 
810 
3,694 
302,360 

3,622 
8,944 

2,192 
30,653 
2,806 
— 
48,217 
48,200 
1,860 
1,459 
1,654 
— 
326 
101,716 

— 

— 

43 
1,001,645 
(725,650)

61 
276,099 
577,740  $

37 
811,049 
(610,514)

72 
200,644 
302,360 

$

$

$

$

____________________
(1) Includes amounts attributable to related party transactions. See Note 19 for further details.

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements.

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HEALTH CATALYST, INC.

Consolidated Statements of Operations

(in thousands, except per share data)

(1)
Revenue :

Technology

Professional services

Total revenue

(1)
Cost of revenue, excluding depreciation and amortization :

Technology

Professional services

Total cost of revenue, excluding depreciation and amortization

(1)
Operating expenses :

Sales and marketing

Research and development

General and administrative

Depreciation and amortization

Total operating expenses

Loss from operations

Loss on extinguishment of debt

Interest and other expense, net

Loss before income taxes

Income tax provision (benefit)

Net loss

Less: accretion of redeemable convertible preferred stock

Net loss attributable to common stockholders

Net loss per share attributable to common stockholders, basic and diluted

Weighted-average shares outstanding used in calculating net loss per share attributable to common

2020

Year Ended December 31,
2019

2018

$

110,467  $

83,975  $

78,378 

188,845 

35,604 

62,473 

98,077 

55,411 

53,517 

59,240 

18,725 

186,893 

(96,125)

(8,514)

(11,572)

(116,211)

70,966 

154,941 

27,797 

47,548 

75,345 

47,284 

46,252 

31,713 

9,212 

134,461 

(54,865)

(1,670)

(3,419)

(59,954)

(1,194)
(115,017) $

— 

(115,017) $

142 
(60,096) $

180,826 
(240,922) $

(2.91) $

(12.86) $

$

$

$

57,224 

55,350 

112,574 

19,429 

40,423 

59,852 

44,123 

38,592 

22,690 

7,412 

112,817 

(60,095)

— 

(2,024)

(62,119)

(135)
(61,984)

52,037 
(114,021)

(23.76)

stockholders, basic and diluted

39,541 

18,741 

4,798 

__________________
(1)    Includes amounts attributable to related party transactions. See Note 19 for further details.

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements.

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HEALTH CATALYST, INC.

Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Loss

(in thousands)

Net loss

Other comprehensive gain (loss):

Change in unrealized gain (loss) on investments

Change in foreign currency translation adjustment

Comprehensive loss

2020

Year Ended December 31,
2019

2018

$

(115,017) $

(60,096) $

(61,984)

(59)

48 

$

(115,028) $

75 

(2)
(60,023) $

11 

— 
(61,973)

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements.

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HEALTH CATALYST, INC.

Consolidated Statements of Redeemable Convertible Preferred Stock and Stockholders’ Equity (Deficit) (in thousands, except share data)
Total
Stockholders’
Equity
(Deficit)

Accumulated
Other
Comprehensive
Income (Loss)

Redeemable Convertible
Preferred Stock

Additional
Paid-In
Capital

Accumulated
Deficit

Common Stock

Amount

Amount

Shares

Shares

Balance as of January 1, 2018
Issuance of Series E redeemable convertible

preferred stock, net of issuance costs of $13

Repurchase of common stock
Exercise of stock options
Stock-based compensation
Common stock warrants
Net loss
Other comprehensive gain
Accretion of redeemable convertible preferred

stock

Balance as of December 31, 2018
Issuance of Series F redeemable convertible

preferred stock, net of issuance costs of $115

Initial public offering, net of underwriters'
discounts and commissions and offering
costs

Accretion of redeemable convertible preferred

stock

Conversion of redeemable convertible

preferred stock

Exercise of stock options
Stock-based compensation
Exercise of common stock warrants
Issuance of common stock under ESPP
Net loss
Other comprehensive gain
Balance as of December 31, 2019
Adoption of the current expected credit loss

standard

Issuance of common stock as acquisition

consideration

Equity component of convertible senior notes,

net

Purchase of Capped Calls concurrent with
issuance of convertible senior notes
Issuance of common stock under ESPP
Vesting of restricted stock units and restricted

shares

Exercise of stock options
Stock-based compensation
Net loss
Other comprehensive loss
Balance as of December 31, 2020

21,109,771  $

321,569 

4,853,841  $

5  $

—  $

(259,468) $

(12) $

(259,475)

1,603,923 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 

36,239 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 

— 
(798,372)
723,887 
— 
— 
— 
— 

— 
(1)
1 
— 
— 
— 
— 

— 
(8,711)
3,044 
4,198 
186 
— 
— 

— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
(61,984)
— 

— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
11 

— 
(8,712)
3,045 
4,198 
186 
(61,984)
11 

— 

22,713,694  $

52,037 
409,845 

— 

4,779,356  $

— 
5  $

1,283  $
—  $

(53,320)
(374,772) $

— 
(1) $

(52,037)
(374,768)

437,787 

12,073 

— 

— 

— 

(23,151,481)
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
—  $

— 

— 

— 

— 
— 

— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
—  $

— 

8,050,000 

180,826 

(602,744)
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 

— 

— 

— 

— 
— 

— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 

— 

23,151,481 
373,292 
— 
189,959 
134,766 
— 
— 

36,678,854  $

— 

2,190,229 

— 

— 
173,989 

585,057 
3,748,719 
— 
— 
— 

43,376,848  $

— 

8 

— 

23 
1 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
37  $

— 

2 

— 

— 
— 

— 
4 
— 
— 
— 
43  $

— 

190,031 

— 

— 

(5,180)

(175,646)

602,721 
2,655 
17,844 
— 
2,978 
— 
— 
811,049  $

— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
(60,096)
— 

(610,514) $

— 

(119)

72,455 

61,213 

(21,743)
4,273 

— 
36,260 
38,138 
— 
— 

— 

— 

— 
— 

— 
— 
— 
(115,017)
— 

1,001,645  $

(725,650) $

— 

— 

— 

— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
73 
72  $

— 

— 

— 

— 
— 

— 
— 
— 
— 
(11)
61  $

— 

190,039 

(180,826)

602,744 
2,656 
17,844 
— 
2,978 
(60,096)
73 
200,644 

(119)

72,457 

61,213 

(21,743)
4,273 

— 
36,264 
38,138 
(115,017)
(11)
276,099 

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements.

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HEALTH CATALYST, INC.

Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows

(in thousands)

Cash flows from operating activities
Net loss
Adjustments to reconcile net loss to net cash used in operating activities:
Depreciation and amortization
Loss on extinguishment of debt
Amortization of debt discount and issuance costs
Non-cash operating lease expense
Investment discount and premium (accretion) amortization
Provision for expected credit losses
Stock-based compensation expense
Deferred tax provision (benefit)
Change in fair value of contingent consideration liabilities
Other
Change in operating assets and liabilities:

Accounts receivable
Prepaid expenses and other assets
Accounts payable, accrued liabilities, and other liabilities
Deferred revenue
Operating lease liabilities

Net cash used in operating activities
Cash flows from investing activities
Purchase of short-term investments
Proceeds from the sale and maturity of short-term investments
Acquisition of businesses, net of cash acquired
Purchases of property and equipment
Capitalization of internal use software
Proceeds from the sale of property and equipment
Purchase of intangible assets
Net cash (used in) provided by investing activities
Cash flows from financing activities
Proceeds from convertible senior notes, net of issuance costs
Purchase of capped calls concurrent with issuance of convertible senior notes
Proceeds from initial public offering, net of underwriters' discounts and commissions
Proceeds from the issuance of redeemable convertible preferred stock, net of issuance costs
Proceeds from exercise of stock options
Proceeds from employee stock purchase plan
Repurchase of common stock
Repayment of credit facilities
Proceeds from credit facilities, net of debt issuance costs
Payments of acquisition-related consideration
Payments of deferred offering costs
Net cash provided by financing activities
Effect of exchange rate changes on cash and cash equivalents
Net increase (decrease) in cash and cash equivalents

94

Year Ended December 31,
2019

2020

2018

$

(115,017) $

(60,096) $

(61,984)

18,725 
8,514 
8,054 
4,303 
1,349 
863 
37,957 
(1,273)
14,088 
116 

(16,448)
(3,667)
8,243 
11,459 
(3,414)
(26,148)

(189,526)
219,069 
(101,657)
(7,775)
(1,442)
14 
(1,248)
(82,565)

222,482 
(21,743)
— 
— 
36,264 
4,273 
— 
(57,043)
— 
(1,624)
— 
182,609 
26 
73,922 

9,212 
1,670 
1,081 
3,460 
(615)
— 
17,844 
40 
— 
(54)

127 
(1,596)
(86)
77 
(3,248)
(32,184)

(256,007)
50,677 
— 
(2,015)
(384)
62 
(1,935)
(209,602)

— 
— 
194,649 
12,073 
2,656 
2,978 
— 
(21,821)
47,169 
(1,713)
(4,610)
231,381 
6 
(10,399)

7,412 
— 
533 
3,003 
(143)
359 
4,198 
(163)
— 
(63)

(3,986)
(1,221)
4,588 
10,317 
(3,146)
(40,296)

(13,993)
37,870 
— 
(2,078)
(197)
29 
(228)
21,403 

— 
— 
— 
33,987 
3,045 
— 
(8,712)
— 
9,950 
(13,924)
— 
24,346 
— 
5,453 

Table of Contents

Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of period

Cash and cash equivalents at end of period

Supplemental disclosures of cash flow information
Cash paid for income taxes, net
Cash paid for interest
Supplemental disclosures of non-cash investing and financing information
Redeemable convertible preferred stock accretion
Deferred offering costs included in accounts payable and accrued liabilities
Series E redeemable convertible preferred stock allocated to business combination
Common stock issued in connection with acquisitions
Stock-based compensation capitalized as internal use software
Purchase of property and equipment included in accounts payable and accrued liabilities
Purchase of intangible assets included in accounts payable and accrued liabilities
Operating lease right-of-use assets obtained in exchange for operating lease obligations

$

$

$

18,032 
91,954  $

28,431 
18,032  $

22,978 
28,431 

92  $

4,979

—  $
—
—
72,457
181
2,310
78
24,456

19  $

5,557

180,826  $
—
—
—
—
209
1,626
581

31 
3,937

52,037 
100
2,252
—
—
84
—
6,641

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements.

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HEALTH CATALYST, INC.

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements

1. Description of Business and Summary of Significant Accounting Policies

Nature of operations

Health  Catalyst,  Inc.  (Health  Catalyst)  was  incorporated  under  the  laws  of  Delaware  in  September  2011.  We  are  a  leading  provider  of  data  and
analytics  technology  and  services  to  healthcare  organizations.  Our  Solution  comprises  a  cloud-based  data  platform,  analytics  software,  and  professional
services  expertise.  Our  customers,  which  are  primarily  healthcare  providers,  use  our  Solution  to  manage  their  data,  derive  analytical  insights  to  operate
their organizations, and produce measurable clinical, financial, and operational improvements.

Basis of presentation

The accompanying consolidated financial statements have been prepared in accordance with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP).

We have reclassified certain prior period amounts to conform to the current period presentation.

Reclassifications

Certain  prior  year  amounts  on  the  consolidated  statements  of  cash  flows  have  been  reclassified  to  conform  to  current  year  presentation.  A
reclassification was made to separately present the non-cash operating lease expense as a non-cash reconciling adjustment from net loss and the change in
the  operating  lease  liabilities  due  to  cash  payments  as  a  change  in  operating  assets  and  liabilities.  This  net  change  is  not  material  and  does  not  affect
previously  reported  net  cash  used  in  operating  activities  in  the  consolidated  statements  of  cash  flows.  This  reclassification  has  no  effect  on  our  other
consolidated financial statements for the years ended December 31, 2020 and 2019.

Initial Public Offering

On  July  29,  2019,  we  closed  our  initial  public  offering  of  common  stock  (IPO)  in  which  we  issued  and  sold  8,050,000  shares  (inclusive  of  the
underwriters' over-allotment option to purchase 1,050,000 shares) of common stock at $26.00 per share. We received net proceeds of $194.6 million after
deducting  underwriting  discounts  and  commissions  and  before  deducting  offering  costs  of  $4.6  million.  Upon  the  closing  of  our  IPO,  all  shares  of  our
outstanding redeemable convertible preferred stock converted into 23,151,481 shares of common stock on a one-for-one basis.

Stock Split

On July 10, 2019, we effected a 1-for-2 reverse stock split of our capital stock. We have adjusted all references to share and per share amounts in the

accompanying consolidated financial statements and notes to reflect the reverse stock split.

Principles of consolidation

The  consolidated  financial  statements  include  the  accounts  of  Health  Catalyst  and  its  wholly-owned  subsidiaries.  Intercompany  balances  and

transactions have been eliminated.

Use of estimates

The preparation of financial statements in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States requires us to make estimates
and  assumptions  that  affect  the  reported  amounts  of  assets  and  liabilities  and  disclosure  of  contingent  assets  and  liabilities  at  the  date  of  the  financial
statements  and  the  reported  amounts  of  revenues  and  expenses  during  the  reporting  period.  On  an  on-going  basis,  we  evaluate  our  estimates,  including
those related to revenue recognition, provisions for expected credit losses, useful lives of property and equipment, capitalization and estimated useful life of
internal-use  software  and  other  intangible  assets,  fair  value  of  financial  instruments,  deferred  tax  assets,  stock-based  compensation,  contingent
consideration, the period of benefit for deferred contract acquisition costs, the incremental borrowing rate used for operating leases, and tax uncertainties.
Actual results could differ from those estimates.

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Segment reporting

HEALTH CATALYST, INC.

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements

Operating  segments  are  identified  as  components  of  an  enterprise  about  which  separate  discrete  financial  information  is  evaluated  by  the  chief
operating  decision  maker  (the  CODM)  in  assessing  performance  and  making  decisions  regarding  resource  allocation.  We  operate  our  business  in  two
operating segments that also represent our reportable segments. Our segments are (1) technology and (2) professional services.

The CODM, the Chief Executive Officer, uses Adjusted Gross Profit (defined as revenue less cost of revenue that excludes depreciation, amortization,

stock-based compensation expense, and certain other operating expenses) as the measure of our profit.

Net loss per share

Basic net loss per share is calculated by dividing net loss attributable to common stockholders by the weighted average number of shares of common
stock outstanding. Net loss attributable to common stockholders is computed as net loss less accretion of redeemable convertible preferred stock. Diluted
net loss per share attributable to common stockholders is calculated by giving effect to all potentially dilutive common stock equivalents outstanding for the
period.  For  purposes  of  this  calculation,  stock  options,  restricted  stock  units  (RSUs),  convertible  senior  notes,  restricted  shares,  shares  issuable  as
acquisition-related contingent consideration, and purchase rights and purchase rights committed under the employee stock purchase plan are considered to
be common stock equivalents but have been excluded from the calculation of diluted net loss per share attributable to common stockholders as the effect is
antidilutive.

Since we have the intent and ability to settle the principal amount of our convertible senior notes in cash and any excess in shares of our common
stock, we use the treasury stock method for calculating any potential dilutive effect of the conversion spread on net income (loss) per share, if applicable.
The conversion spread has a potentially dilutive impact when the average market price of our common stock for a given period exceeds $30.60 per share.
The capped calls are excluded from the calculation of diluted earnings per share, as they would be antidilutive under the treasury stock method.

Prior  to  our  IPO,  we  computed  basic  and  diluted  net  loss  per  share  in  conformity  with  the  two-class  method  required  for  participating  securities.
The  two-class  method  is  an  earnings  allocation  formula  that  treats  a  participating  security  as  having  rights  to  earnings  that  otherwise  would  have  been
available to holders of common stock. Redeemable convertible preferred stock and common stock were considered participating securities for purposes of
this calculation. However, the two-class method did not impact the net loss per common share attributable to common stockholders as we were in a loss
position  for  each  of  the  periods  presented  and  the  redeemable  convertible  preferred  stockholders  did  not  have  a  contractual  obligation  to  participate  in
losses. In connection with our IPO the redeemable convertible preferred stock was converted and we no longer have participating securities.

Revenue recognition

We  recognize  revenue  in  accordance  with  Accounting  Standards  Codification  Topic  606,  Revenue  from  Contracts  with  Customers  (Topic  606). We
derive our revenues primarily from technology subscriptions and professional services. We determine revenue recognition by applying the following steps:

Identification of the contract, or contracts, with a customer;
Identification of the performance obligations in the contract;

•
•
• Determination of the transaction price;
• Allocation of the transaction price to the performance obligations in the contract; and
•

Recognition of revenue when, or as, we satisfy the performance obligation.

We recognize revenue net of any taxes collected from customers and subsequently remitted to governmental authorities.

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Technology revenue

HEALTH CATALYST, INC.

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements

Technology revenue primarily consists of subscription fees charged to customers for access to use our technology. We provide customers access to our
technology through either an all-access or limited-access, modular subscription. The majority of our subscription arrangements are cloud-based and do not
provide customers the right to take possession of the technology or contain a significant penalty if the customer were to take possession of the technology.
Revenue  from  cloud-based  subscriptions  is  recognized  ratably  over  the  contract  term  beginning  on  the  date  that  the  service  is  made  available  to  the
customer. Most of our subscription contracts have up to a three-year term, of which the vast majority are terminable after one year upon 90 days' notice.

Subscriptions that allow the customer to take software on-premise without significant penalty are treated as time-based licenses. These arrangements
generally include access to technology, access to unspecified future products and maintenance and support. Revenue for upfront access to our technology
library is recognized at a point in time when the technology is made available to the customer. Revenue for access to unspecified future products included
in time-based license subscriptions is recognized ratably over the contract term beginning on the date that the access is made available to the customer.

We also have certain perpetual license arrangements. Revenue from these arrangements is recognized at a point in time upon delivery of the software.
Technology revenue also includes maintenance and support revenue which generally includes bug fixes, updates, and support services. Revenue related to
maintenance and support is recognized over the contract term beginning on the date that the service is made available to the customer.

Professional services revenue

Professional  services  revenue  primarily  includes  data  and  analytics  services,  domain  expertise  services,  outsourcing  services,  and  implementation
services. Professional services arrangements typically include a fee for making full-time equivalent (FTE) services available to our customers on a monthly
basis. FTE services generally consist of a blend of analytic engineers, analysts, and data scientists based on the domain expertise needed to best serve our
customers.  Professional  services  are  typically  considered  distinct  from  the  technology  offerings  and  revenue  is  generally  recognized  as  the  service  is
provided using the “right to invoice” practical expedient.

Contracts with multiple performance obligations

Many  of  our  contracts  include  multiple  performance  obligations.  We  account  for  performance  obligations  separately  if  they  are  capable  of  being
distinct  within  the  context  of  the  contract.  In  these  circumstances,  the  transaction  price  is  allocated  to  separate  performance  obligations  on  a  relative
standalone selling price basis. We determine standalone selling prices based on the observable price a good or service is sold for separately when available.
In cases where standalone selling prices are not directly observable, based on information available, we utilize the expected cost plus a margin, adjusted
market assessment, or residual estimation method. We consider all information available including our overall pricing objectives, market conditions, and
other factors, which may include customer demographics and the types of users.

Standalone  selling  prices  are  not  directly  observable  for  our  all-access  and  limited-access  technology  arrangements,  which  are  composed  of  cloud-
based subscriptions, time-based licenses, and perpetual licenses. For these technology arrangements, we use the residual estimation method due to a limited
number of standalone transactions and/or prices that are highly variable.

Variable consideration

We  have  also  entered  into  at-risk  and  shared  savings  arrangements  with  certain  customers  whereby  we  receive  variable  consideration  based  on  the
achievement of measurable improvements which may include cost savings or performance against metrics. For these arrangements, we estimate revenue
using the most likely amount that we will receive. Estimates are based on our historical experience and best judgment at the time to the extent it is probable
that  a  significant  reversal  of  revenue  recognized  will  not  occur.  Due  to  the  nature  of  our  arrangements,  certain  estimates  may  be  constrained  until  the
uncertainty is further resolved.

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Contract balances

HEALTH CATALYST, INC.

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements

Contract assets resulting from services performed prior to invoicing customers are recorded as unbilled accounts receivable and are presented on the
consolidated balance sheets in aggregate with accounts receivable. Unbilled accounts receivable generally become billable at contractually specified dates
or  upon  the  attainment  of  contractually  defined  milestones.  As  of  December  31,  2020,  2019,  and  2018,  the  unbilled  accounts  receivable  included  in
accounts receivable on our consolidated balance sheets was $1.6 million, $2.9 million and $3.4 million, respectively.

We  record  contract  liabilities  as  deferred  revenue  when  cash  payments  are  received  or  due  in  advance  of  performance.  Deferred  revenue  primarily
relates to the advance consideration received from the customer. As of December 31, 2020, 2019, and 2018, the total of current and non-current deferred
revenue on our consolidated balance sheets was $49.0 million, $32.1 million, and $32.0 million, respectively. The current year increase is partially due to
deferred revenue from our current year acquisitions.

Deferred Costs

We  capitalize  sales  commissions,  and  associated  fringe  costs,  such  as  payroll  taxes,  paid  to  direct  sales  personnel  and  other  incremental  costs  of
obtaining contracts with customers, provided we expect to recover those costs. We determine that costs should be deferred based on our sales compensation
plans when the commissions are incremental and would not have occurred absent the customer contract. As of December 31, 2020, $0.5 million of deferred
contract acquisition costs are expected to be amortized within the next 12 months and are included in prepaid expenses and other assets on the consolidated
balance  sheets.  The  remaining  $1.4  million  of  deferred  contract  acquisition  costs  as  of  December  31,  2020  are  included  in  non-current  other  assets.
Deferred contract acquisition costs capitalized as of December 31, 2019 were not material.

Commissions paid upon the initial acquisition of a contract are amortized on a straight-line basis over an estimated period of benefit of four years.
Amortization  is  recognized  on  a  straight-line  basis  commensurate  with  the  pattern  of  revenue  recognition.  The  period  of  benefit  was  estimated  by
considering factors such as estimated average customer life, the rate of technological change in our subscription service, and the impact of competition in
our  industry.  As  our  average  customer  life  significantly  exceeded  the  rate  of  change  in  our  technology,  we  concluded  that  the  rate  of  change  in  the
technology underlying our subscription service was the most significant factor in determining the period of benefit for which the asset relates. In evaluating
the  rate  of  change  in  our  technology,  we  considered  the  competition  in  our  industry,  our  commitment  to  continuous  innovation,  and  the  frequency  of
product, platform, and technology updates. We determined that the impact of competition in our industry is reflected in the period of benefit through the
rate  of  technological  change.  Amortization  of  deferred  contract  acquisition  costs  is  included  within  sales  and  marketing  expense  in  the  consolidated
statements of operations.

We  defer  certain  costs  to  fulfill  a  contract  when  the  costs  are  expected  to  be  recovered,  are  directly  related  to  in-process  contracts  and  enhance
resources that will be used in satisfying performance obligations in the future. These deferred fulfillment costs primarily consist of employee compensation
incurred as part of the implementation of new contracts. As of December 31, 2020 and 2019, we had deferred contract fulfillment costs of $0.5 million and
$0.9 million, respectively. Amortization of deferred fulfillment costs is included within cost of revenue in the consolidated statements of operations.

We periodically review these deferred costs to determine whether events or changes in circumstances have occurred that could impact the period of

benefit. There were no impairment losses recorded during the periods presented.

Cost of revenue, excluding depreciation and amortization

Cost of technology revenue primarily consists of costs associated with hosting and supporting our technology, including third-party cloud computing
and hosting costs, contractor costs, and salary and related personnel costs for our cloud services and support teams. Cost of professional services revenue
primarily consists of salary and related personnel costs, travel-related costs, and independent contractor costs. Cost of revenue excludes costs related to
depreciation and amortization.

Cash and cash equivalents

We consider all highly liquid investments purchased with a remaining maturity of three months or less at the time of acquisition to be cash equivalents.

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Short-term investments

HEALTH CATALYST, INC.

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements

Our investment policy limits investments to highly-rated instruments that mature in less than 12 months. We classify our short-term investments as

available for sale.

Accounts receivable

Accounts  receivable  are  non-interest  bearing  and  are  recorded  at  the  original  invoiced  amount  less  an  allowance  for  credit  losses  based  on  the
probability of future collections. Our allowance is based on our estimate of expected credit losses for outstanding trade accounts receivables and unbilled
receivables. We determine expected credit losses based on historical write-off experience, an analysis of the aging of outstanding receivables, customer
payment  patterns,  the  establishment  of  specific  reserves  for  customers  in  an  adverse  financial  condition,  and  our  expectations  of  changes  in  macro-
economic conditions, including the current COVID-19 pandemic, that may impact the collectability of outstanding receivables.

We  reassess  the  adequacy  of  the  allowance  for  credit  losses  each  reporting  period.  The  following  table  presents  a  rollforward  of  the  allowance  for

credit losses (in thousands):

Balance at January 1, 2020

Current period provision for expected credit losses
Less: Write-offs, net of recoveries

Balance at December 31, 2020

Property and equipment

Allowance for Credit Losses on Accounts Receivable
534 
$
863 
(197)
1,200 

$

Property and equipment are stated at historical cost less accumulated depreciation. Repairs and maintenance costs that do not extend the useful life or
improve the related assets are expensed as incurred. Depreciation is computed using the straight-line method over the estimated useful lives of the assets.
The estimated useful life of each asset category is as follows:

Computer equipment

Furniture and fixtures

Leasehold improvements

Computer software

Capitalized internal-use software costs

Lesser of lease term or estimated useful life

2-3 years
3 years

2-3 years

2-3 years

When  there  are  indicators  of  potential  impairment,  we  evaluate  the  recoverability  of  the  carrying  values  by  comparing  the  carrying  amount  of  the
applicable asset group to the estimated undiscounted future cash flows expected to be generated by the asset group over the remaining useful life of the
primary asset in the asset group. If the carrying amount of the asset group exceeds its estimated undiscounted future net cash flows, an impairment charge
is recognized based on the amount by which the carrying value of the long-lived assets exceeds the fair value of the assets. We did not incur any long-lived
impairment charges for the years ended December 31, 2020, 2019, and 2018.

Intangible assets

Intangible  assets  include  developed  technologies,  customer  relationships,  customer  contracts,  and  trademarks  that  were  acquired  in  business
combinations and asset acquisitions. Intangible assets also include the purchase of third-party computer software. The intangible assets are amortized using
the straight-line method over the assets’ estimated useful lives. The estimated useful life of each asset category is as follows:

Developed technologies

Customer relationships and contract backlog

Computer software licenses

Trademarks

2-10 years

2-7 years
2-5 years

2-5 years

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Goodwill

HEALTH CATALYST, INC.

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements

We record goodwill as the difference between the aggregate consideration paid for a business combination and the fair value of the identifiable net
tangible  and  intangible  assets  acquired.  Goodwill  includes  the  know-how  of  the  assembled  workforce,  the  ability  of  the  workforce  to  further  improve
technology and product offerings, customer relationships, and the expected cash flows resulting from these efforts. Goodwill may also include expected
synergies  resulting  from  the  complementary  strategic  fit  these  businesses  bring  to  existing  operations.  Goodwill  is  assessed  for  impairment  annually  or
more frequently if indicators of impairment are present or circumstances suggest that impairment may exist.

Our first step in the goodwill impairment test is a qualitative analysis of factors that could be indicators of potential impairment. Next, if a quantitative
analysis is necessary, we compare the fair value of the reporting unit with its carrying amount, including goodwill. If the fair value of the reporting unit
exceeds  its  carrying  amount,  the  goodwill  of  the  reporting  unit  is  not  considered  impaired.  If  the  carrying  amount  of  the  reporting  unit  exceeds  its  fair
value,  we  would  recognize  an  impairment  charge  for  the  amount  by  which  the  carrying  amount  exceeds  the  reporting  unit’s  fair  value.  There  was  no
impairment of goodwill for the years ended December 31, 2020, 2019, and 2018.

Business combinations

The results of businesses acquired in a business combination are included in our consolidated financial statements from the date of the acquisition.
Purchase accounting results in assets and liabilities of an acquired business generally being recorded at their estimated fair values on the acquisition date.
Any excess consideration over the fair value of identifiable assets acquired and liabilities assumed is recognized as goodwill.

We perform valuations of assets acquired and liabilities assumed on each acquisition accounted for as a business combination in order to record the
tangible and intangible assets acquired and liabilities assumed based on our best estimate of fair value. Determining the fair value of assets acquired and
liabilities assumed requires management to use significant judgment and estimates including the selection of valuation methodologies, estimates of future
revenue  and  cash  flows,  discount  rates,  and  selection  of  comparable  companies.  Significant  estimation  is  required  in  determining  the  fair  value  of  the
customer-related  intangible  assets  and  technology-related  intangible  assets.  The  significant  estimation  is  primarily  due  to  the  judgmental  nature  of  the
inputs  to  the  valuation  models  used  to  measure  the  fair  value  of  these  intangible  assets,  as  well  as  the  sensitivity  of  the  respective  fair  values  to  the
underlying significant assumptions. We typically use the income approach or cost approach to measure the fair value of intangible assets. The significant
assumptions used to form the basis of the estimates included the number of engineer hours required to develop technology, expected revenue including
revenue growth rates, rate and timing of obsolescence, royalty rates and earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization (“EBITDA”) margin
used in the estimate for customer relationships, and backlog. Many of these significant assumptions were forward-looking and could be affected by future
economic  and  market  conditions.  We  engage  the  assistance  of  valuation  specialists  in  concluding  on  fair  value  measurements  in  connection  with
determining fair values of assets acquired and liabilities assumed in a business combination.

During  the  year  ended  December  31,  2020,  we  expensed  $2.7  million  of  transaction  costs  associated  with  business  combinations.  The  costs  were
expensed as incurred and are included in general and administrative expense in our consolidated statements of operations. No such costs were incurred or
recorded for the years ended December 31, 2019 and 2018.

Contingent consideration liabilities

Our  acquisition  consideration  in  business  combinations  may  include  an  estimate  for  contingent  consideration  that  will  be  paid  if  certain  earn-out
performance targets are met. The resulting contingent consideration liabilities are categorized as a Level 3 fair value measurement because we estimate
projections during the earn-out period utilizing unobservable inputs, including various potential pay-out scenarios based on billings and revenue-related
earn-out  targets.  Changes  to  the  unobservable  inputs  could  have  a  material  impact  on  our  consolidated  financial  statements.  We  value  the  expected
contingent consideration and the corresponding liabilities using a probability model such as the Monte Carlo method based on estimates of potential pay-
out scenarios. Probabilities are applied to each potential scenario and the resulting values are discounted using a rate that considers weighted average cost
of  capital  as  well  as  a  specific  risk  premium  associated  with  the  riskiness  of  the  earn-out  itself,  the  related  projections,  projected  payment  dates,  and
volatility in the fair value of our common stock. The fair value of the contingent consideration is remeasured each reporting period.

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HEALTH CATALYST, INC.

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements

The portion of the contingent consideration liabilities that will be settled in shares of our common stock is classified as a component of non-current
liabilities in our consolidated balance sheets, while the portion to paid in cash is classified as a component of current liabilities. Changes to the contingent
consideration liabilities are reflected as part of general and administrative expense in our consolidated statements of operations.

Advertising costs

All advertising costs are expensed as incurred. For the years ended December 31, 2020, 2019, and 2018, we incurred $4.3 million, $4.9 million, and

$5.0 million in advertising costs, respectively.

Development costs and internal-use software

For technology products that are developed to be licensed externally, we determined that technological feasibility is reached shortly before the products
are ready for general release. Any costs associated with software development between the time technological feasibility is reached and general release are
inconsequential.

We  capitalize  certain  development  costs  incurred  in  connection  with  our  internal-use  software.  These  capitalized  costs  are  primarily  related  to  the
software platforms that are hosted by us and accessed by our customers on a subscription basis. Costs incurred in the preliminary stages of development are
expensed as incurred as research and development costs. Once an application has reached the development stage, internal and external costs, if direct and
incremental, are capitalized until the software is substantially complete and ready for its intended use. We also capitalize costs related to specific upgrades
and  enhancements  when  it  is  probable  the  expenditures  will  result  in  additional  functionality.  Capitalized  costs  are  recorded  as  part  of  property  and
equipment. Maintenance and training costs are expensed as incurred. Internal-use software is amortized on a straight-line basis over its estimated useful
life.

Stock-based compensation

Stock-based awards, including stock options and RSUs, are measured and recognized in the consolidated financial statements based on the fair value of
the  award  on  the  grant  date.  For  awards  subject  to  performance  conditions,  we  record  expense  when  the  performance  condition  becomes  probable.  We
record forfeitures of stock-based awards as the actual forfeitures occur.

We  estimate  the  fair  value  of  stock  option  awards  on  the  grant  date  using  the  Black-Scholes  option  pricing  model.  We  have  issued  two  types  of
employee  stock-based  awards,  standard  and  two-tier.  Our  standard  stock-based  awards  vest  solely  on  a  service-based  condition.  For  these  awards,  we
recognize stock-based compensation expense on a straight-line basis over the vesting period. Two-tier employee stock-based awards contain both a service-
based condition and performance condition, defined as the earlier of (i) an acquisition or change in control of the company or (ii) upon the occurrence of an
initial public offering by the Company. A change in control event and effective registration event are not deemed probable until consummated; accordingly,
no expense is recorded related to two-tier stock options until the performance condition becomes probable of occurring.

Awards  that  contain  both  service-based  and  performance  conditions  are  recognized  using  the  accelerated  attribution  method  once  the  performance
condition is probable of occurring. The service-based condition is generally a service period of four years. Upon closing our IPO, we recorded cumulative
share-based compensation expense of approximately $6.0 million using the accumulated attribution method for two-tier employee stock-based awards for
which the service condition had been satisfied at that date.

Stock-based compensation expense related to purchase rights issued under the 2019 Health Catalyst Employee Stock Purchase Plan (ESPP) is based on
the Black-Scholes option-pricing model fair value of the estimated number of awards as of the beginning of the offering period. Stock-based compensation
expense is recognized using the straight-line method over the offering period.

The compensation expense for non-employees is recognized, without changes in the fair value of the award, in the same period and in the same manner

as though we had paid cash for the services, which is typically the vesting period of the respective award.

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Concentrations of credit risk

HEALTH CATALYST, INC.

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements

Financial  instruments  that  potentially  subject  us  to  a  concentration  of  credit  risk  consist  principally  of  cash  and  cash  equivalents,  short-term
investments, and accounts receivable. We deposit cash with high credit quality financial institutions which at times may exceed federally insured amounts.
We have not experienced any losses on our deposits.

We  perform  ongoing  credit  evaluations  of  our  customers’  financial  condition  and  require  no  collateral  from  customers.  We  review  the  expected
collectability of accounts receivable and record an allowance for credit losses based on the probability of future collections. There were no customers with
outstanding net accounts receivable balances as a percentage of total outstanding net accounts receivable balance greater than 10% as of December 31,
2020 and 2019. There were no customers with revenue as a percentage of total revenue greater than 10% for the years ended December 31, 2020, 2019, and
2018.

Income taxes

Deferred  income  tax  balances  are  accounted  for  using  the  liability  method  and  reflect  the  effects  of  temporary  differences  between  the  financial
reporting and tax bases of our assets and liabilities using enacted tax rates expected to apply when taxes are actually paid or recovered. In addition, deferred
tax assets and liabilities are recorded for net operating loss (NOL) and credit carryforwards. A valuation allowance is provided against deferred tax assets
unless it is more likely than not that they will be realized based on all available positive and negative evidence. Such evidence includes, but is not limited
to,  recent  cumulative  earnings  or  losses,  expectations  of  future  taxable  income  by  taxing  jurisdiction,  and  the  carry-forward  periods  available  for  the
utilization of deferred tax assets.

We use a two-step approach to recognize and measure uncertain income tax positions. The first step is to evaluate the tax position for recognition by
determining  if  the  weight  of  available  evidence  indicates  it  is  more  likely  than  not  that  the  position  will  be  sustained  upon  audit.  The  second  step  is  to
measure the tax benefit as the largest amount, which is more than 50% likely of being realized upon ultimate settlement. We do not accrue interest and
penalties related to unrecognized tax benefits within the provision for income taxes because we have net operating loss carryforwards. Significant judgment
is required to evaluate uncertain tax positions.

Although we believe that we have adequately reserved for our uncertain tax positions, we can provide no assurance that the final tax outcome of these
matters  will  not  be  materially  different.  We  evaluate  our  uncertain  tax  positions  on  a  regular  basis  and  evaluations  are  based  on  a  number  of  factors,
including changes in facts and circumstances, changes in tax law, correspondence with tax authorities during the course of an audit, and effective settlement
of audit issues. To the extent that the final tax outcome of these matters is different than the amounts recorded, such differences will affect the provision for
income taxes in the period in which such determination is made and could have a material impact on our financial condition and results of operations.

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HEALTH CATALYST, INC.

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements

Fair value of financial instruments

The carrying amounts reported in the consolidated balance sheets for cash, receivables, accounts payable, and current accrued expenses approximate
fair values because of the immediate or short-term maturity of these financial instruments. The carrying value of acquisition-related consideration payable,
operating lease liabilities, and long-term debt approximate fair value based on interest rates available for debt with similar terms at December 31, 2020 and
2019. Money market funds and short-term investments are measured at fair value on a recurring basis. Our contingent consideration liabilities are measured
at fair value on a recurring basis based primarily on significant inputs not observable in the market.

Fair  value  is  estimated  by  applying  the  following  hierarchy,  which  prioritizes  the  inputs  used  to  measure  fair  value  into  three  levels  and  bases  the

categorization within the hierarchy upon the lowest level of input that is available and significant to the fair value measurement:

•

•

•

Level 1- Quoted prices in active markets for identical assets or liabilities.

Level  2-  Observable  inputs  other  than  quoted  prices  in  active  markets  for  identical  assets  and  liabilities,  quoted  prices  for  identical  or  similar
assets or liabilities in inactive markets, or other inputs that are observable or can be corroborated by observable market data for substantially the
full term of the assets or liabilities.

Level 3- Inputs that are generally unobservable and typically reflect management’s estimate of assumptions that market participants would use in
pricing the asset or liability.

All of our financial instruments are valued using quoted prices in active markets or based on other observable inputs. For Level 2 securities, we use a
third-party  pricing  service  which  provides  documentation  on  an  ongoing  basis  that  includes,  among  other  things,  pricing  information  with  respect  to
reference data, methodology, inputs summarized by asset class, pricing application, and corroborative information. Our contingent consideration liabilities
are  categorized  as  a  Level  3  fair  value  measurement  because  we  estimate  projections  during  the  earn  out  period  utilizing  various  potential  pay-out
scenarios.

Leases

We  determine  if  an  arrangement  is  a  lease  at  inception.  Operating  leases  are  included  in  operating  lease  right-of-use  (ROU)  assets,  operating  lease
liabilities,  and  operating  lease  liabilities,  net  of  current  portion  in  our  consolidated  balance  sheets.  We  have  adopted  the  short-term  lease  recognition
exemption policy. All of our leasing commitments are classified either as operating leases or otherwise qualify as short-term leases with lease terms of 12
months or less.

ROU assets represent our right to use an underlying asset for the lease term and lease liabilities represent our obligation to make lease payments arising
from the lease. Operating lease ROU assets and liabilities are recognized at commencement date based on the present value of lease payments over the
lease  term.  As  our  lease  contracts  do  not  provide  an  implicit  rate,  we  use  our  incremental  borrowing  rate  based  on  the  information  available  at
commencement date to determine the present value of lease payments. The operating lease ROU asset also includes any lease payments made and excludes
lease executory costs. Our lease terms may include options to extend or terminate the lease when it is reasonably certain that we will exercise the applicable
option. Lease expense for lease payments is recognized on a straight-line basis over the lease term.

We do not have lease agreements that contain non-lease components, which generally would be accounted for separately.

Foreign Currency

The functional currency of our international subsidiaries is generally their local currency. We translate these subsidiaries’ financial statements into U.S.
dollars using month-end exchange rates for assets and liabilities and average exchange rates for revenue and expenses. We record translation gains and
losses in accumulated other comprehensive loss in stockholders’ equity. We record foreign exchange gains and losses in interest and other expense, net. Our
net foreign exchange gains and losses were not material for the periods presented.

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HEALTH CATALYST, INC.

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements

Accounting pronouncements adopted

Goodwill impairment

In January 2017, the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) issued Accounting Standards Update (ASU) 2017-04, Intangibles-Goodwill and
Other - Simplifying the Test for Goodwill Impairment (Topic 350), that simplifies how an entity is required to test goodwill for impairment by eliminating
the second step of the impairment test. The first step measures a goodwill impairment loss by comparing the fair value of a reporting unit to the carrying
amount. If the carrying amount of the reporting unit exceeds its fair value, the carrying amount of goodwill is reduced by the excess reporting unit carrying
amount up to the carrying amount of the goodwill. We adopted ASU 2017-04 as of January 1, 2020. The guidance applies to our reporting requirements in
performing  goodwill  impairment  testing;  however,  the  adoption  of  this  guidance  did  not  have  an  impact  on  our  consolidated  financial  statements  and
related disclosures.

Fair value measurements

In  August  2018,  the  FASB  issued  ASU  2018-13,  Fair  Value  Measurement  (Topic  820),  Disclosure  Framework  -  Changes  to  the  Disclosure
Requirements for Fair Value Measurement, which eliminates certain disclosure requirements for fair value measurements for all entities, requires public
entities  to  disclose  certain  new  information  prospectively,  including  the  ranges  used  to  develop  significant  unobservable  inputs  for  Level  3  fair  value
measurements, and modifies some disclosure requirements. We adopted ASU 2018-13 as of January 1, 2020. The adoption of this standard did not have a
material impact on our consolidated financial statements and related disclosures.

Credit losses

In June 2016, the FASB issued ASU 2016-13, Financial Instruments - Credit Losses (Topic 326), which required the measurement and recognition of
expected  credit  losses  for  certain  financial  instruments,  which  includes  our  accounts  receivable  and  available-for-sale  debt  securities.  ASU  2016-13
replaces the existing incurred loss impairment model with an expected loss model which requires the use of forward-looking information to calculate credit
loss estimates, which results in earlier recognition of credit losses. We adopted ASU 2016-13 effective January 1, 2020. The adoption of the standard did
not  have  a  material  impact  on  our  consolidated  financial  statements.  The  adoption  adjustment  was  recorded  to  our  accumulated  deficit,  as  seen  in  our
consolidated statements of redeemable convertible preferred stock and stockholders’ equity (deficit).

Implementation Costs Incurred in a Cloud Computing Arrangement

In  August  2018,  the  FASB  issued  ASU  2018-15,  Intangibles  —  Goodwill  and  Other  —  Internal-Use  Software  (Subtopic  350-40):  Customer’s
Accounting for Implementation Costs Incurred in a Cloud Computing Arrangement That Is a Service Contract. ASU 2018-15 aligns the requirements for
capitalizing implementation costs in a cloud computing arrangement service contract with the requirements for capitalizing implementation costs incurred
for  an  internal-use  software  license.  We  prospectively  adopted  ASU  2018-15  effective  January  1,  2020.  The  adoption  of  this  standard  did  not  have  a
material impact on our consolidated financial statements and related disclosures.

Recent accounting pronouncements not yet adopted

Accounting for income taxes

In December 2019, the FASB issued ASU 2019-12, Income Taxes (Topic 740) - Simplifying the Accounting for Income Taxes, which simplifies the
accounting for income taxes, eliminates certain exceptions within Topic 740, and clarifies certain aspects of the current guidance to promote consistency
among  reporting  entities.  The  new  standard  is  effective  for  fiscal  years  beginning  after  December  15,  2021.  Most  amendments  within  the  standard  are
required  to  be  applied  on  a  prospective  basis,  while  certain  amendments  must  be  applied  on  a  retrospective  or  modified  retrospective  basis.  We  are
currently evaluating the impacts the provisions of this standard will have on our consolidated financial statements and related disclosures.

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HEALTH CATALYST, INC.

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements

Accounting for convertible instruments

In August 2020, the FASB issued ASU 2020-06, Debt—Debt with Conversion and Other Options (Subtopic 470-20) and Derivatives and Hedging—
Contracts in Entity's Own Equity (Subtopic 815-40)—Accounting For Convertible Instruments and Contracts in an Entity's Own Equity. The new standard
simplifies accounting for convertible instruments by removing major separation models required under current GAAP. Consequently, more convertible debt
instruments  will  be  reported  as  a  single  liability  instrument  with  no  separate  accounting  for  embedded  conversion  features.  The  new  standard  removes
certain  settlement  conditions  that  previously  required  derivative  accounting.  Consequently,  more  equity  contracts  will  be  permitted  to  qualify  for  the
derivative scope exception. The new standard also simplifies the diluted net income per share calculation in certain areas and is effective for annual and
interim periods beginning after December 15, 2021, and early adoption is permitted for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2020. We are currently
evaluating the impact this standard will have on our consolidated financial statements and related disclosures.

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2. Business Combinations

HEALTH CATALYST, INC.

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements

The business acquisitions discussed below are included in our results of operations from their respective dates of acquisition.

Able Health, Inc.

On February 21, 2020, we acquired Able Health, Inc. (Able Health), a leading software-as-a-service provider of quality and regulatory measurement
tracking  and  reporting  to  healthcare  providers  and  risk-bearing  entities,  in  a  transaction  accounted  for  as  a  business  combination.  The  acquisition
consideration transferred was $21.5 million and was comprised of net cash consideration of $15.2 million, Health Catalyst common shares with a fair value
of $3.3 million, and contingent consideration based on achievement of Able Health specified incremental customer billings for the year ending December
31, 2020, with an initial fair value of $3.0 million. The purchase resulted in Health Catalyst acquiring 100% ownership in Able Health. We believe this
acquisition will strengthen Health Catalyst’s Quality and Regulatory Measures capabilities.

An  additional  179,392  shares  of  our  common  stock  subject  to  restriction  agreements,  or  restricted  shares,  were  issued  pursuant  to  the  terms  of  the
acquisition agreement and 60,000 restricted stock units were issued in connection with the acquisition agreement. The value of these restricted shares and
restricted  stock  units  will  be  recognized  as  post-combination  stock-based  compensation  expense  over  their  respective  vesting  terms.  The  vesting  of  the
restricted shares is subject to one year of continuous service by the applicable team members and shall vest on the one-year anniversary of the acquisition
closing date and the service-based condition for the restricted stock units issued pursuant to the terms of the acquisition agreement is satisfied over two
years with a 50% cliff vesting period of one year and ratable quarterly vesting thereafter. Refer to Note 15 for additional details related to our stock-based
compensation.

The following table summarizes the acquisition-date fair value of consideration transferred and the identifiable assets purchased and liabilities assumed

as part of our acquisition of Able Health (in thousands):

Assets acquired:

Accounts receivable
Prepaid expenses and other assets
Developed technologies
Customer relationships
Trademarks

Total assets acquired
Less liabilities assumed:

Accounts payable and other current liabilities
Deferred revenue
Net deferred tax liabilities

Total liabilities assumed
Total assets acquired, net

Goodwill

Total consideration transferred, net of cash acquired

$

$

633 
57 
7,500 
600 
100 
8,890 

91 
762 
1,280 
2,133 
6,757 
14,725 
21,482 

The acquired intangible assets were valued utilizing either an income approach or a cost approach as deemed most applicable, and include customer
relationships, developed technology, and trademarks that will be amortized on a straight-line basis over their estimated useful lives of six years, three years,
and  two  years,  respectively.  The  resulting  goodwill  from  the  Able  Health  acquisition  was  fully  allocated  to  the  technology  reporting  unit  and  is  not
deductible for income tax purposes.

The  post-acquisition  revenue  of  Able  Health  is  not  presented  as  the  amount  was  not  significant  to  our  results  of  operations  for  the  year  ended
December 31, 2020. Net income (loss) information for Able Health after the acquisition date through December 31, 2020 is not presented as the acquired
business was integrated into our operations immediately following the acquisition and is impractical to quantify.

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Healthfinch, Inc.

HEALTH CATALYST, INC.

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements

On July 31, 2020, we acquired Healthfinch, Inc. (Healthfinch), which provides a workflow integration engine delivering insights and analytics into
EMR workflows to automate physicians’ ability to close patient care gaps in real-time, in a transaction accounted for as a business combination. We believe
this acquisition will strengthen our existing population health capabilities. The acquisition consideration transferred was $50.5 million and was comprised
of net cash consideration of $16.9 million, Health Catalyst common shares with a fair value of $27.8 million, and contingent consideration based on certain
earn-out performance targets for Healthfinch during an earn-out period that ends on July 31, 2021, with an initial fair value of $5.8 million. The purchase
resulted in Health Catalyst acquiring 100% ownership in Healthfinch.

The following table summarizes the acquisition-date fair value of consideration transferred and the identifiable assets purchased and liabilities assumed

as part of our acquisition of Healthfinch (in thousands):

Assets acquired:

Accounts receivable
Prepaid expenses and other assets
Developed technologies
Customer relationships and contract backlog
Trademarks

Total assets acquired
Less liabilities assumed:

Accounts payable and other current liabilities
Deferred revenue

Total liabilities assumed
Total assets acquired, net

Goodwill

Total consideration transferred, net of cash acquired

$

$

1,408 
347 
8,100 
10,000 
200 
20,055 

408 
2,100 
2,508 
17,547 
32,960 
50,507 

The acquired intangible assets were valued utilizing either an income approach or a cost approach as deemed most applicable, and include customer
relationships and contract backlog, developed technology, and trademarks that will be amortized on a straight-line basis over their estimated useful lives of
seven  years,  three  years,  and  two  years,  respectively.  The  resulting  goodwill  from  the  Healthfinch  acquisition  was  fully  allocated  to  the  technology
reporting unit and is not deductible for income tax purposes.

The  post-acquisition  revenue  of  Healthfinch  is  not  presented  as  the  amount  was  not  significant  to  our  results  of  operations  for  the  year  ended
December 31, 2020. Net income (loss) information for Healthfinch after the acquisition date through December 31, 2020 is not presented as the acquired
business was integrated into our operations immediately following the acquisition and is impractical to quantify.

Vitalware, LLC

On September 1, 2020, we acquired Vitalware, LLC (Vitalware), a provider of revenue workflow optimization and analytics SaaS technology solutions
to healthcare organizations, in a transaction accounted for as a business combination. Vitalware’s flagship offering is a chargemaster management solution
that delivers results for the complex regulatory and compliance functions needed by healthcare provider systems. Additionally, Vitalware brings to bear
newer product suites to help health systems capture lost revenue and to support compliance with expanding pricing transparency regulation. The acquisition
consideration transferred was $119.2 million and was comprised of  net  cash  consideration  of  $69.6  million,  Health  Catalyst  common  shares  with  a  fair
value of $41.3 million, and contingent consideration based on certain earn-out performance targets for Vitalware during an earn-out period that ends on
March 31, 2021, with an initial fair value of $8.3 million. The purchase resulted in Health Catalyst acquiring 100% ownership in Vitalware.

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HEALTH CATALYST, INC.

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements

An additional 203,997 shares of our common stock subject to a restriction agreement, or restricted shares, were issued pursuant to the terms of the
acquisition agreement. The value of these restricted shares will be recognized as post-combination stock-based compensation expense on a straight-line
basis over the 12-month vesting term. 75% of these restricted shares will vest on a monthly basis over a term of approximately one year with the remaining
25% vesting on the one year anniversary of the acquisition closing date. Refer to Note 15 for additional details related to our stock-based compensation.

The following table summarizes the acquisition-date fair value of consideration transferred and the identifiable assets purchased and liabilities assumed

as part of our acquisition of Vitalware (in thousands):

Assets acquired:

Accounts receivable
Prepaid expenses and other assets
Developed technologies
Customer relationships and contract backlog
Trademarks

Total assets acquired
Less liabilities assumed:

Accounts payable and other current liabilities
Deferred revenue

Total liabilities assumed
Total assets acquired, net

Goodwill

Total consideration transferred, net of cash acquired

$

$

3,220 
469 
18,000 
43,000 
1,400 
66,089 

766 
2,589 
3,355 
62,734 
56,443 
119,177 

The acquired intangible assets were valued utilizing an income approach, and include customer relationships, contract backlog, developed technology,
and trademarks that will be amortized on a straight-line basis over their estimated useful lives of seven years, two years, four years, and for trademarks two
to five years, respectively. The resulting goodwill from the Vitalware acquisition was fully allocated to the technology reporting unit and is deductible for
income tax purposes.

The post-acquisition revenue of Vitalware was $5.9 million for the year ended December 31, 2020. Net income (loss) information for Vitalware after
the acquisition date through December 31, 2020 is not presented as the acquired business was integrated into our operations immediately following the
acquisition and is impractical to quantify.

Unaudited Pro Forma Financial Information

The following table reflects our unaudited pro forma combined results of operations for years ended December 31, 2020 and 2019 as if the acquisitions

of Able Health, Healthfinch, and Vitalware had taken place on January 1, 2019:

Total pro forma revenues (unaudited)
Pro forma net loss (unaudited)

Year Ended December 31,

2020

2019

$

209,409  $
(124,485)

173,973 
(90,850)

The unaudited pro forma information is not intended to present actual results that would have been attained had the acquisition been completed as of

January 1, 2019 or to project potential results as of any future date or for any future periods.

The pro forma adjustments are based upon available information and certain assumptions that we believe are reasonable. The nature and amount of
material,  nonrecurring  pro  forma  adjustments  directly  attributable  to  these  acquisitions  which  are  included  in  the  pro  forma  revenues  or  net  loss,  as
applicable,  are  attributable  to  fair  value  adjustments  to  deferred  revenues,  amortization  of  acquired  intangible  assets,  acquisition-related  income  tax
considerations, and acquisition transaction costs that had a net impact on the pro forma combined net loss of $9.5 million and $30.8 million for the years
ended December 31, 2020 and 2019, respectively.

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3. Revenue

Disaggregation of revenue

HEALTH CATALYST, INC.

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements

The following table represents Health Catalyst’s revenue disaggregated by type of arrangement (in thousands):

Recurring technology
One-time technology (i.e., perpetual license)
Professional services
Total revenue

2020

Year Ended December 31,
2019

2018

$

$

110,467  $
— 
78,378 
188,845  $

83,791  $
184 
70,966 
154,941  $

55,266 
1,958 
55,350 
112,574 

For the years ended December 31, 2020, 2019, and 2018, 99.8%, 99.7%, and 99.4% of revenue was related to contracts with customers located in the

United States.

4. Goodwill and Intangible Assets

We operate our business in two operating segments that also represent our reporting units. Our reporting units are organized based on our technology

and professional services. We have not incurred any goodwill impairment charges.

Goodwill by reporting unit is as follows (in thousands):

Technology

Professional services

Total goodwill

As of December 31, 2020, intangible assets consisted of the following (in thousands):

Developed technologies
Customer relationships and contracts
Computer software licenses
Trademarks

Total intangible assets

As of December 31, 2019, intangible assets consisted of the following (in thousands):

Developed technologies

Customer relationships and contracts

Computer software licenses

Trademarks

Total intangible assets

As of December 31,

2020

2019

$

$

107,040  $

782 
107,822  $

2,912 

782 
3,694 

Gross

Accumulated
Amortization

Net

69,729  $
57,764 
7,359 
1,700 
136,552  $

(25,293) $
(7,482)
(4,615)
(241)
(37,631) $

44,436 
50,282 
2,744 
1,459 
98,921 

Gross

Accumulated
Amortization

Net

36,129  $

(16,548) $

4,164 

7,114 

100 
47,507  $

(2,773)

(2,576)

(75)
(21,972) $

19,581 

1,391 

4,538 

25 
25,535 

$

$

$

$

Amortization expense for intangible assets for the years ended December 31, 2020, 2019, and 2018 was $15.9 million, $6.3 million, and $5.1 million,

respectively. Amortization expense for intangible assets is included in depreciation and amortization in the consolidated statements of operations.

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HEALTH CATALYST, INC.

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements

The weighted-average remaining amortization period by type of intangible assets as of December 31, 2020 is as follows:

Developed technologies
Customer relationships and contracts
Computer software licenses
Trademarks

As of December 31, 2020, future amortization expense for finite-lived intangible assets is estimated to be as follows (in thousands):

Year Ending December 31,

2021
2022
2023
2024
2025
Thereafter

Total future amortization expense

5. Property and Equipment

Property and equipment consisted of the following (in thousands):

Computer equipment

Leasehold improvements

Furniture and fixtures

Capitalized internal-use software costs

Computer software

Capital lease equipment

Total property and equipment

Less: accumulated depreciation

Property and equipment, net

Weighted-Average
Remaining
Amortization
Period (years)

3.6
5.7
1.6
3.2

27,835 
24,627 
15,812 
12,358 
8,183 
10,106 
98,921 

$

$

As of December 31,

2020

2019

$

8,576  $

8,089 

1,734 

3,489 

947 

37 

22,872 

(10,009)
12,863  $

$

7,951 

2,234 

1,030 

1,866 

972 

37 

14,090 

(9,795)
4,295 

Our long-lived assets are located in the United States. Depreciation expense for the years ended December 31, 2020, 2019, and 2018 was $2.9 million,
$2.9 million, and $2.3 million, respectively. Depreciation expense includes amortization of assets recorded under a capital lease and the amortization of
capitalized internal-use software costs.

We capitalized $1.6 million, $0.4 million, and $0.2 million of internal-use software costs for the years ended December 31, 2020, 2019, and 2018,
respectively. We incurred $0.7 million, $0.5 million, and $0.4 million of capitalized internal-use software cost amortization expense for the years ended
December 31, 2020, 2019, and 2018, respectively.

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6. Short-term Investments

HEALTH CATALYST, INC.

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements

Our investment policy limits investments to highly-rated instruments that mature in less than 12 months. We classify our short-term investments as
available for sale. Available-for-sale securities are recorded on our consolidated balance sheets at fair market value and any unrealized gains or losses are
reported as part of other comprehensive loss on the consolidated statements of comprehensive loss. We determine realized gains or losses on the sales of
investments  through  the  specific  identification  method  and  record  such  gains  or  losses  as  part  of  interest  and  other  expense,  net  on  the  consolidated
statements of operations. We did not have any material realized gains or losses on investments during the years ended December 31, 2020, 2019, and 2018.
We measure the fair value of investments on a recurring basis.

Accrued  interest  receivables  related  to  our  available-for-sale  securities  of  $0.5  million  and  $0.9  million  as  of  December  31,  2020  and  2019  were

included within prepaid expenses and other assets on our consolidated balance sheets.

The following table summarizes, by major security type, our cash equivalents and short-term investments (in thousands) as of December 31, 2020:

Money market funds

U.S. treasury notes

Commercial paper

Corporate bonds

Asset-backed securities

Total

Amortized Cost

Unrealized Gains

Unrealized Losses

Fair Value

Cash equivalents

79,387  $

—  $

—  $

79,387  $

79,387  $

59,382 

68,018 

48,494 

3,009 
258,290  $

7 

— 

8 

— 
15  $

— 

— 

(1)

— 
(1) $

59,389 

68,018 

48,501 

— 

— 

— 

3,009 
258,304  $

— 
79,387  $

$

$

Short-term
Investments

— 

59,389 

68,018 

48,501 

3,009 
178,917 

The following table summarizes, by major security type, our cash equivalents and short-term investments (in thousands) as of December 31, 2019:

Money market funds

U.S. treasury notes

Commercial paper

Corporate bonds

Asset-backed securities

Total

Amortized Cost

Unrealized Gains

Unrealized Losses

Fair Value

Cash equivalents

17,175  $

—  $

—  $

17,175  $

17,175  $

58,130 

46,973 

64,978 

40,090 
227,346  $

34 

— 

27 

18 
79  $

— 

— 

(5)

— 
(5) $

58,164 

46,973 

65,000 

— 

— 

— 

40,108 
227,420  $

— 
17,175  $

$

$

Short-term
Investments

— 

58,164 

46,973 

65,000 

40,108 
210,245 

On a quarterly basis we evaluate unrealized losses on our available-for-sale debt securities and the related accrued interest receivables to determine
whether  a  decline  in  the  fair  value  below  the  amortized  cost  basis  is  due  to  credit-related  factors  or  noncredit-related  factors.  We  do  not  intend  to  sell
investments that are in an unrealized loss position and it is not likely that we will be required to sell any investments before recovery of their amortized cost
basis. As of December 31, 2020 and 2019, there were no material unrealized losses due to credit-related factors.

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HEALTH CATALYST, INC.

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements

7. Fair Value of Financial Instruments

Assets and liabilities measured at fair value on a recurring basis as of December 31, 2020 were as follows (in thousands):

Assets (Liabilities):

Money market funds
U.S. Treasury notes
Commercial paper
Corporate bonds
Asset-backed securities
Contingent consideration liabilities

Total

Level 1

Level 2

Level 3

Total

December 31, 2020

$

$

79,387  $
59,389 
— 
— 
— 
— 
138,776  $

—  $
— 
68,018 
48,501 
3,009 
— 
119,528  $

—  $
— 
— 
— 
— 
(31,264)
(31,264) $

79,387 
59,389 
68,018 
48,501 
3,009 
(31,264)
227,040 

Assets measured at fair value on a recurring basis as of December 31, 2019 were as follows (in thousands):

Assets:

Money market funds
U.S. Treasury notes
Commercial paper
Corporate bonds
Asset-backed securities

Total

Level 1

Level 2

Level 3

Total

December 31, 2019

$

$

17,175  $
58,164 
— 
— 
— 
75,339  $

—  $
— 
46,973 
65,000 
40,108 
152,081  $

—  $
— 
— 
— 
— 
—  $

17,175 
58,164 
46,973 
65,000 
40,108 
227,420 

As of December 31, 2019, there were no liabilities measured at fair value on a recurring basis. There were no transfers between Level 1 and Level 2 of

the fair value measurement hierarchy during the years ended December 31, 2020 and 2019.

Convertible Senior Notes

As  of  December  31,  2020,  the  estimated  fair  value  of  the  our  convertible  senior  notes,  with  aggregate  principal  totaling  $230.0
million, was $363.0 million. We estimate the fair value based on quoted market prices in an inactive market on the last trading day of the reporting period
(Level  2).  These  convertible  senior  notes  are  recorded  at  face  value  less  unamortized  debt  discount  and  transaction  costs  on  our  consolidated  balance
sheets. Refer to Note 11—Convertible Senior Notes and Credit Facilities for further information.

Level 3 fair value measurements

The Able Health acquisition consideration includes an initial estimate for contingent consideration for shares of our common stock that will be issued
if  certain  incremental  billing  targets  for  Able  Health  are  met  during  an  earn-out  period  that  ends  on  December  31,  2020.  The  Healthfinch  acquisition
consideration includes an initial estimate for contingent consideration based on certain revenue-based earn-out performance targets for Healthfinch during
an earn-out period that ends on July 31, 2021. The Healthfinch contingent consideration will be paid in a combination of cash and shares of our common
stock  in  the  same  proportion  as  the  initial  acquisition  consideration.  The  Vitalware  acquisition  consideration  includes  an  initial  estimate  for  contingent
consideration  based  on  certain  revenue-based  earn-out  performance  targets  for  Vitalware  during  an  earn-out  period  that  ends  on  March  31,  2021.  The
Vitalware  contingent  consideration  is  capped  at  $30.0  million  and  will  be  paid  in  a  combination  of  approximately  50%  cash  and  50%  in  shares  of  our
common stock.

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HEALTH CATALYST, INC.

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements

We  value  the  expected  contingent  consideration  and  the  corresponding  liabilities  using  the  Monte  Carlo  valuation  method  based  on  estimates  of
potential pay-out scenarios. The resulting contingent consideration liabilities are categorized as Level 3 fair value measurements and are remeasured as of
each reporting period.

The aggregate intrinsic value of the billings and revenue-based earn-out contingent consideration liabilities is approximately $31.8 million based on a
point estimate of our internal forecasting of the ultimate earn-outs that will be earned and our common stock price as of December 31, 2020. The recurring
Level 3 fair value measurements of the contingent consideration liabilities include the other following significant inputs as of December 31, 2020:

Billings and revenue-based earn-out liabilities

Monte Carlo

$31.3 million

3%

10-12%

Valuation Method

Fair Value

Market Price of
Revenue Risk

Revenue Volatility

Stock Price
Volatility

47%

The following table sets forth a summary of the changes in the estimated fair value of the contingent consideration liabilities, which is measured at fair

value on a recurring basis using significant unobservable inputs (in thousands):

Balance at December 31, 2019

Initial contingent consideration liabilities from acquisitions (see Note 2)
Change in fair value of contingent consideration liabilities

Balance at December 31, 2020

8. Accrued liabilities

As of December 31, 2020 and 2019, accrued liabilities consisted of the following (in thousands):

Accrued compensation and benefit expenses

Other accrued liabilities

Total accrued liabilities

9. Leases

Operating leases

Fair Value Measurements Using Significant
Unobservable Inputs (Level 3)

$

$

— 
17,176 
14,088 
31,264 

As of December 31,

2020

2019

$

$

9,838  $

6,672 
16,510  $

4,278 

4,666 
8,944 

We  lease  office  space  and  certain  equipment  under  operating  leases  that  expire  between  2020  and  2031.  The  terms  of  the  leases  provide  for  rental
payments on a graduated scale, options to renew the leases (one to five years), landlord incentives or allowances, and periods of free rent. In March 2020,
we entered into a lease for office space in South Jordan, Utah, that will become our new company headquarters. This new lease for office space is intended
to  replace  our  current  headquarters  in  Salt  Lake  City,  Utah,  the  lease  for  which  expired  December  31,  2020.  This  new  lease  will  require  total  lease
payments of $31.7 million with a non-cancelable lease term of 11 years, excluding renewal options.

Lease payments will be required beginning January 1, 2021, however, we took initial possession of the first 64,910 square feet of the new headquarters
in  June  2020  to  begin  leasehold  improvements,  which  resulted  in  a  right-of-use  asset  and  corresponding  operating  lease  liability  of  $13.0  million,  and
commencement of operating lease expense. We took possession of an additional 53,297 square feet of the new headquarters lease in August 2020, which
resulted  in  an  additional  right-of-use  asset  and  corresponding  lease  liability  of  $10.8  million.  According  to  the  terms  of  this  new  lease  agreement,  our
leased square footage will expand between 2022 and 2023 resulting in $2.8 million of additional required future lease payments. We shall have the right to
sublease all, or a portion, of this leased office space provided that certain terms and conditions are met.

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HEALTH CATALYST, INC.

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements

Our operating lease expense for the years ended December 31, 2020, 2019, and 2018, was $4.3 million, $3.2 million, and $2.2 million, respectively. In
addition to those amounts, lease expense attributable to short-term leases with terms of 12 months or less for the years ended December 31, 2020, 2019,
and 2018, was $0.2 million, $0.2 million, and $0.5 million, respectively.

Maturities of lease liabilities under operating leases at December 31, 2020 are as follows (in thousands):

Year ending December 31:

2021
2022
2023
2024
2025

Thereafter

Total lease payments

Less: Imputed interest

Total lease liability

$

$

3,882 
3,425 
3,364 
3,073 
2,931 

17,044 

33,719 

(7,428)

26,291 

Supplemental balance sheet information related to leases as of December 31, 2020 and 2019 is as follows (in thousands other than weighted average

amounts):

Operating lease right-of-use assets

Operating lease liabilities, current

Operating lease liabilities, noncurrent

Total operating lease liabilities

Weighted-average remaining operating lease term (years)

Weighted-average operating lease discount rate

10. Acquisition-related consideration payable

As of December 31,

2020

2019

$

$

$

24,729 

2,622 

23,669 
26,291 

$

$

$

10.4

5.0 %

3,787 

2,806 

1,654 
4,460 

2.2

5.6 %

The  remaining  future  minimum  cash  commitments  as  part  of  prior-year  asset  acquisitions  and  business  combinations  are  $2.0  million  as  of
December 31, 2020 and are expected to be paid in early 2021. The remaining obligations from the acquisition-related consideration payable are recorded as
liabilities on our consolidated balance sheets.

11. Convertible Senior Notes and Credit Facilities

Convertible Senior Notes

On  April  14,  2020,  we  issued  $230.0  million  in  aggregate  principal  amount  of  2.50%  Convertible  Senior  Notes  due  2025  (the  Notes),  in  a  private
placement to qualified institutional buyers exempt from registration under the Securities Act (the Note Offering). The net proceeds from the issuance of the
Notes were approximately $222.5 million, after deducting the initial purchasers’ discounts and offering expenses payable by us.

The Notes are governed by an indenture (the Indenture) between us, as the issuer, and U.S. Bank National Association, as trustee. The Notes are our
senior, unsecured obligations and accrue interest payable semiannually in arrears on April 15 and October 15 of each year, beginning on October 15, 2020,
at a rate of 2.50% per year. The Notes will mature on April 15, 2025, unless earlier converted, redeemed, or repurchased. The Indenture does not contain
any financial or operating covenants or restrictions on the payments of dividends, the incurrence of indebtedness, or the issuance or repurchase of securities
by us or any of our subsidiaries.

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HEALTH CATALYST, INC.

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements

We may not redeem the notes prior to April 20, 2023. On or after April 20, 2023, we may redeem, for cash, all or a portion of the notes, at our option,
if the last reported sale price of our common stock has been at least 130% of the conversion price then in effect for at least 20 trading days (whether or not
consecutive), including the trading day immediately preceding the date on which we provide notice of redemption, during any 30 consecutive trading day
period ending on, and including, the trading day immediately preceding the date on which we provide notice of redemption at a redemption price equal to
100% of the principal amount of the Notes to be redeemed, plus accrued and unpaid interest to, but excluding, the redemption date. No sinking fund is
provided for the notes.

The Notes have an initial conversion rate of 32.6797 shares of our common stock per $1,000 principal amount of Notes (which is equivalent to an
initial conversion price of approximately $30.60 per share of our common stock). Following certain corporate events that occur prior to the maturity date,
we will increase the conversion rate for a holder who elects to convert its Notes in connection with such corporate event. Additionally, upon the occurrence
of a corporate event that constitutes a “fundamental change” per the Indenture, holders of the Notes may require the Company to repurchase for cash all or
a portion of their Notes at a purchase price equal to 100% of the principal amount of the Notes plus accrued and unpaid interest.

Holders of the Notes may convert all or any portion of their Notes at any time prior to the close of business on October 14, 2024, in integral multiples

of $1,000 principal amount, only under the following circumstances:

• During any calendar quarter commencing after the calendar quarter ended on June 30, 2020 (and only during such calendar quarter), if the last
reported sale price of our common stock for at least 20 trading days (whether or not consecutive) during a period of 30 consecutive trading days
ending on, and including, the last trading day of the immediately preceding calendar quarter is greater than or equal to 130% of the conversion
price on each applicable trading day;

• During the five business day period after any five consecutive trading day period (the “measurement period”) in which the trading price as defined
in the Indenture per $1,000 principal amount of Notes for each trading day of the measurement period was less than 98% of the product of the last
reported sale price of our common stock and the conversion rate on each such trading day;

•

If we call such notes for redemption, at any time prior to the close of business on the scheduled trading day immediately preceding the redemption
date; or

• Upon the occurrence of specified corporate events described in the Indenture.

On or after October 15, 2024, until the close of business on the second scheduled trading day immediately preceding the maturity date, holders may
convert  all  or  any  portion  of  their  Notes  at  the  conversion  rate  at  any  time  irrespective  of  the  foregoing  circumstances.  Upon  conversion,  holders  will
receive cash, shares of our common stock or a combination of cash and shares of common stock, at our election.

As of December 31, 2020, the conditions allowing holders of the Notes to convert were not met. The Notes are therefore not currently convertible and

are classified as long-term debt.

We account for the Notes as separate liability and equity components. We determined the carrying amount of the liability component as the present
value of its cash flows using a discount rate of approximately 10% based on comparable debt transactions for similar companies. The estimated interest rate
was applied to the Notes, which resulted in a fair value of the liability component of $166.7 million upon issuance, calculated as the present value of future
contractual  payments  based  on  the  $230.0  million  aggregate  principal  amount.  The  excess  of  the  principal  amount  of  the  liability  component  over  its
carrying amount, or the debt discount, is amortized to interest expense over the term of the Notes using the effective interest method. The $63.3 million
difference  between  the  gross  proceeds  received  from  issuance  of  the  Notes  of  $230.0  million  and  the  estimated  fair  value  of  the  liability  component
represents  the  equity  component,  or  the  conversion  option,  of  the  Notes  and  was  recorded  in  additional  paid-in  capital.  The  equity  component  is  not
remeasured as long as it continues to meet the conditions for equity classification.

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HEALTH CATALYST, INC.

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements

We allocated issuance costs related to the issuance of the Notes to the liability and equity components using the same proportions as the initial carrying
value of the Notes. Issuance costs attributable to the liability component were $5.5 million and are being amortized to interest expense using the effective
interest method over the term of the Notes. Issuance costs attributable to the equity component were $2.1 million and are netted with the equity component
of the Notes in stockholders’ equity on the consolidated balance sheets.

The net carrying value of the liability component of the Notes was as follows (in thousands):

Principal

Less: Unamortized debt discount
Less: Unamortized issuance costs

Net carrying amount

The net carrying value of the equity component of the Notes was as follows (in thousands):

Proceeds allocated to the conversion option (debt discount)

Less: Issuance costs

Net carrying amount

The interest expense recognized related to the Notes was as follows (in thousands):

Contractual interest expense
Amortization of debt issuance costs and discount

Total

December 31, 2020

230,000 
(56,206)
(4,800)
168,994 

December 31, 2020

63,270 
(2,057)
61,213 

$

$

$

$

Year Ended December 31,
2020

$

$

4,073 
7,725 
11,798 

Based on the closing price of our common stock of $43.53 on December 31, 2020, the if-converted value of the Notes was $97.2 million more than

their respective principal amount.

Capped Calls

On April 8, 2020, concurrently with the pricing of the Notes, we entered into privately negotiated capped call transactions (Base Capped Calls) with

certain option counterparties. In addition, in connection with the initial purchasers’ exercise in full of their option to purchase additional Notes, on April 9,
2020, we entered into additional capped call transactions (together with the Base Capped Calls, the Capped Calls) with each of the option counterparties.
We used approximately $21.7 million of the net proceeds from the Note Offering to pay the cost of the Capped Calls and allocated issuance costs. The
Capped Calls have initial cap prices of $42.00 per share, subject to certain adjustments. The Capped Calls are expected generally to reduce the potential
dilution to our common stock upon any conversion of Notes and/or offset any cash payments we are required to make in excess of the principal amount of
converted Notes, as the case may be, with such reduction and/or offset subject to the cap price. The Capped Calls are separate transactions that we entered
into with the option counterparties, and are not part of the terms of the Notes. As the Capped Call transactions are considered indexed to our own stock and
are considered equity classified, they have been recorded in stockholders’ equity and are not accounted for as derivatives. The cost incurred in connection
with the Capped Calls was recorded as a reduction to additional paid-in capital on our consolidated balance sheets.

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Credit Facilities

HEALTH CATALYST, INC.

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements

As of December 31, 2019, our term credit facilities consisted of the following, excluding debt discount and issue costs of $1.8 million (in thousands):

OrbiMed term loan

SVB revolving line of credit

Total credit facilities

Less: Current portion of credit facilities

Credit facilities, less current portion

OrbiMed debt financing transaction

$

$

Balance

Remaining
Capacity

50,000  $

30,000 

Interest Rate

Basis Rate

10.00 % Higher of LIBOR plus 7.5%

and 10.0%
Prime plus 0.50%

5,000 

35,000 

5.25 %

— 

50,000  $
— 

50,000 

On February 6, 2019, we entered into a debt financing agreement with OrbiMed Royalty Opportunities II, LP (OrbiMed) where we obtained an $80.0
million senior term loan commitment, with $50.0 million available and up to an additional $30.0 million contingently available on or prior to March 31,
2020 (the Delayed Draw Commitment). We paid $2.4 million in fees related to the establishment of the OrbiMed term loan and incurred $0.3 million in
debt  issuance  costs.  The  Delayed  Draw  Commitment  is  contingent  upon  our  achievement  of  minimum  levels  of  technology  revenues  ranging  from
technology revenues for the latest 12 months of at least $60.0 million to borrow up to $10.0 million, to a minimum of $80.0 million in technology revenues
to borrow between $25.0 million and $30.0 million.

The contractual interest rate of the OrbiMed term loan was the higher of LIBOR plus 7.5% and 10.0%. Interest payments were required at the end of
each month. The maturity date of the OrbiMed term loan was February 6, 2024. Upon the payment of all or any portion of the principal amount on the
OrbiMed term loan, we were required to pay an exit fee of 5% of the principal amount paid.

This exit fee was being accreted as interest expense over the contractual term of the loan. As we elected to prepay the principal balance prior to the 48-

month anniversary of the closing date we were required to pay a repayment premium of 9% of the principal balance prepaid.

Amounts  borrowed  under  the  OrbiMed  term  loan  were  secured  by  a  first  priority  security  interest  in  substantially  all  of  our  assets  other  than
intellectual property. The agreement also included a financial covenant requiring the achievement of minimum trailing-twelve-month revenue amounts as
well as certain other financial and non-financial covenants. We were in compliance with these covenants under the terms of the OrbiMed term loan as of
April 14, 2020.

Extinguishment of OrbiMed term loan

On April 14, 2020, we used $57.0 million of proceeds from the Note Offering to prepay in full all outstanding indebtedness, including prepayment
penalties, under the Credit Agreement and terminated the Credit Agreement. We recorded a loss on debt extinguishment of $8.5 million during the three
months ended June 30, 2020, including $1.5 million unamortized debt discounts and issuance costs related to the OrbiMed term loan and $7.0 million of
repayment fees.

SVB revolving line of credit

In  June  2016,  we  signed  a  Loan  and  Security  Agreement  with  Silicon  Valley  Bank  (SVB)  which  established  a  revolving  line  of  credit  based  on  a
formula amount. On February 6, 2019, we amended the Loan and Security Agreement with SVB which reduced the revolving line of credit to a current
maximum  of  $5.0  million  with  an  obligation  to  maintain  a  minimum  of  $5.0  million  cash  or  cash  equivalents  on  deposit  with  SVB  to  maintain  the
assurance of future credit availability. The line may have been increased to $10.0 million upon request and approval by SVB. The maturity date of the
revolving line of credit was amended to be February 6, 2021.

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HEALTH CATALYST, INC.

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements

Extinguishment of SVB revolving line of credit

On April 8, 2020, we entered into a Pay-Off Letter Agreement with SVB, pursuant to which we paid to SVB immaterial termination costs, representing
all amounts due and owing under the Amended and Restated Loan and Security Agreement (the Loan Agreement), dated as of October 6, 2017, with SVB,
in exchange for, among other things, (i) full discharge of all of our obligations under the Loan Agreement; and (ii) release of security interests and other
liens granted to or held by SVB as a security for our obligations.

12. Redeemable Convertible Preferred Stock

We  had  45,427,441  shares  of  $0.001  par  value  redeemable  convertible  preferred  stock  authorized,  of  which  22,713,694  shares  were  issued  and
outstanding,  as  of  December  31,  2018.  The  issued  and  outstanding  redeemable  convertible  preferred  shares  as  of  December  31,  2018  consisted  of
3,587,499 designated Series A redeemable convertible preferred stock, 4,986,827 designated Series B redeemable convertible preferred stock, 4,794,007
designated  Series  C  redeemable  convertible  preferred  stock,  3,314,612  designated  Series  D  redeemable  convertible  preferred  stock,  and  6,030,749
designated Series E redeemable convertible preferred stock.

During  the  year  ended  December  31,  2019,  we  authorized  1,077,587  shares  of  Series  F  redeemable  convertible  preferred  stock  and  issued  437,787
shares  of  Series  F  redeemable  convertible  preferred  stock  for  total  cash  consideration  of  $12.1  million,  net  of  offering  costs  of  $0.1  million.  Upon  the
closing  of  our  IPO,  the  23,151,481  shares  of  redeemable  convertible  preferred  stock,  then  outstanding,  were  converted  on  a  one-for-one  basis  into
23,151,481 shares of common stock.

Prior to the IPO, our shares of redeemable convertible preferred stock were redeemable at the option of the holder at an amount equal to the greater of
the original issuance price or the redemption value. Accordingly, we recognized changes in the redemption value as they occurred and adjusted the carrying
amount of the applicable class of redeemable convertible preferred stock as a deemed dividend (or a reversal of accretion to reflect a reduction in fair value
of  the  redemption  value)  from  additional  paid-in-capital  or  an  adjustment  of  the  accumulated  deficit  to  equal  the  redemption  value  at  the  end  of  each
reporting period.

This method viewed the end of the reporting period as if it were also the redemption date for the applicable class of redeemable convertible preferred

stock. The shares of redeemable convertible preferred stock were accreted to the estimated fair value of $409.8 million as of December 31, 2018.

Upon  the  closing  of  our  IPO,  the  shares  of  redeemable  convertible  preferred  stock  were  accreted  to  the  IPO  price  of  $26.00  per  share,  or  $602.7
million. As the shares of redeemable convertible preferred stock were converted into shares of common stock, and are no longer redeemable at the option
of  the  holder,  we  reclassified  the  carrying  value  of  the  shares  of  redeemable  convertible  preferred  stock  to  stockholders’  equity  (deficit)  as  part  of  the
closing of our IPO.

13. Stockholders’ Equity

Amendment and Restatement of Certificate of Incorporation

In connection with the IPO, the certificate of incorporation of Health Catalyst was amended and restated to, among other things, provide for the (i)
authorization  of  500,000,000  shares  of  common  stock  with  a  par  value  of  $0.001  per  share;  (ii)  authorization  of  25,000,000  shares  of  undesignated
preferred stock that may be issued from time to time; and (iii) establishment of a classified board of directors, divided into three classes, each of whose
members will serve for staggered three-year terms.

Preferred Stock

Our board of directors has the authority, without further action by our stockholders, to issue up to 25,000,000 shares of preferred stock in one or more
series and to fix the rights, preferences, and privileges thereof, including voting rights. As of December 31, 2020 and 2019, no shares of this preferred stock
were issued and outstanding.

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Common stock

HEALTH CATALYST, INC.

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements

We had 500,000,000 shares of $0.001 par value common stock authorized, of which 43,709,237 and 36,731,632 shares were legally issued and
outstanding as of December 31, 2020 and 2019, respectively. The shares legally issued and outstanding as of December 31, 2020 included 332,389 shares
issued pursuant to the Able Health and Vitalware acquisition agreements, which are subject to a restriction agreement and were unvested as of
December 31, 2020, and as such, for accounting purposes they were not considered to be outstanding common stock shares. The shares legally issued and
outstanding as of December 31, 2019 included 52,778 shares issued to former employees with notes determined to be substantively nonrecourse and, as
such, for accounting purposes they were not considered to be outstanding common stock shares. Each share of common stock has the right to one vote on
all matters submitted to a vote of stockholders. The holders of common stock are also entitled to receive dividends whenever funds are legally available and
when declared by the Board of Directors, subject to prior rights of holders of all classes of stock outstanding having priority rights as to dividends. No
dividends have been declared or paid on our common stock through December 31, 2020.

During  2018,  as  part  of  a  tender  offer  we  repurchased  798,372  shares  of  common  stock  from  team  members,  which  shares  were  received  by  the
exercise of stock options or contractual arrangements, for cash consideration of $16.9 million. The estimated fair value of the repurchased common stock of
$8.6 million and offering costs of $0.1 million were recorded as a reduction to common stock and additional paid-in capital. The excess of the repurchase
price over the estimated fair value of the common stock redeemed from team members of $8.3 million was accounted for as compensation expense on the
consolidated statement of operations.

The effects of the excess of the tender offer repurchase price over the estimated fair value of the common stock redeemed from team members on the

statement of operations for the year ended December 31, 2018 are summarized in the following table (in thousands):

Cost of revenue

Sales and marketing

Research and development

General and administrative

Total compensation expense from repurchase

Common stock warrants

2018

312 

3,967 

906 

3,133 
8,318 

$

$

In October 2017, we issued warrants in connection with the Mezzanine Loan and Security Agreement with SVB for up to 255,336 shares of common
stock with a ten-year term at an exercise price of $10.66 per share. The fair value of the warrants on the date of grant was $1.6 million and recorded as
deferred financing costs. The deferred financing costs were reclassified to a discount on debt in proportion to the advances made on the credit facility. The
deferred financing costs and the debt discount were scheduled to be recognized as interest expense over the term of the credit facility.

In  October  2018,  all  remaining  contingencies  were  resolved  and  the  remaining  common  stock  warrant  liability  balance  was  marked  to  market  and
recorded in stockholders’ equity (deficit). In February 2019, the term loan from the Mezzanine Loan and Security Agreement with SVB was paid off in
full,  resulting  in  the  $1.0  million  unamortized  portion  of  the  debt  discount  related  to  the  warrants  being  included  in  the  current  year  loss  on  debt
extinguishment. Soon after effective date of our IPO, all 255,336 outstanding warrants were exercised through a cashless exercise, resulting in the issuance
of 189,959 shares of common stock.

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14. Net Loss Per Share

HEALTH CATALYST, INC.

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements

The following table presents the calculation of basic and diluted net loss per share attributable to common stockholders (in thousands, except share and

per share amounts):

Numerator:

Net loss attributable to common stockholders

Denominator:

Weighted-average number of shares used in calculating net loss per share attributable to common

stockholders, basic and diluted

Net loss per share attributable to common stockholders, basic and diluted

2020

Year Ended December 31,
2019

2018

(115,017) $

(240,922) $

(114,021)

39,540,726 

18,741,119 

(2.91) $

(12.86) $

4,798,363 

(23.76)

$

$

During the years ended December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018, we incurred net losses and, therefore, the effect of our stock options, restricted stock units,
convertible senior notes, restricted shares, common stock warrants, redeemable convertible preferred stock (as converted), shares issuable as acquisition-
related contingent consideration, and purchase rights issued under our employee stock purchase plan were not included in the calculation of diluted net loss
per  share  attributable  to  common  stockholders  as  the  effect  would  be  anti-dilutive.  The  following  table  contains  share  totals  with  a  potentially  dilutive
impact:

Redeemable convertible preferred stock
Common stock options
Restricted stock units
Shares related to convertible senior notes
Shares issuable as acquisition-related contingent consideration
Restricted shares
Common stock warrants

Total potentially dilutive securities

2020

— 
3,892,936 
1,839,998 
1,281,217 
363,867 
332,389 
— 
7,710,407 

As of December 31,
2019

— 
7,847,716 
503,861 
— 
— 
— 
— 
8,351,577 

2018
22,713,694 
7,237,417 
— 
— 
— 
— 
255,336 
30,206,447 

The conversion spread of the Notes will have a potentially dilutive impact when the average market price of our common stock for a given period
exceeds the conversion price of $30.60 per share. The shares related to the Notes in the table above are calculated based on the average market price of our
common stock for the three months ended December 31, 2020. Capped Calls are excluded from the calculation of diluted earnings per share, as they would
be antidilutive.

The shares issuable as acquisition-related contingent consideration in the table above are calculated based on the earn-out achieved and the amount of
shares that would be issuable if the contingent consideration liabilities from the acquisitions of Able Health, Healthfinch, and Vitalware were to be settled
as of December 31, 2020.

15. Stock-Based Compensation

In 2011, our Board of Directors adopted the Health Catalyst, Inc. 2011 Stock Incentive Plan (2011 Plan), which provided for the direct award, sale of
shares and granting of options for our common stock to our directors, team members, or consultants. In connection with our IPO, our board of directors
adopted the 2019 Stock Option and Incentive Plan (2019 Plan). The 2019 Plan provides flexibility to our compensation committee to use various equity-
based incentive awards as compensation tools to motivate our workforce, including the grant of incentive and nonstatutory stock options, restricted and
unrestricted stock, RSUs, and stock appreciation rights to our directors, team members, or consultants.

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HEALTH CATALYST, INC.

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements

We have initially reserved 2,756,607 shares of our common stock (2,500,000 under the 2019 Plan and 256,607 shares under the 2011 Plan that were
available immediately prior to the IPO registration date). The 2019 Plan provides that the number of shares reserved available for issuance under the plan
will  automatically  increase  each  January  1,  beginning  on  January  1,  2020,  by  5%  of  the  outstanding  number  of  shares  of  our  common  stock  on  the
immediately preceding December 31, or such lesser number of shares as determined by our compensation committee.

As  of  December  31,  2020  and  2019,  there  were  13,109,459  and  11,272,878  shares  authorized  for  grant,  respectively,  and  2,481,818  and  2,309,370

shares available for grant, respectively, under the 2019 Plan and 2011 Plan (collectively the 'Stock Incentive Plan').

All options were granted with an exercise price determined by the board of directors that was equal to the estimated fair value of our common stock at
the  date  of  grant,  based  on  the  information  known  on  the  date  of  grant.  Subject  to  certain  exceptions  defined  in  the  Stock  Incentive  Plan  related  to  an
employee's termination, options generally expire on the tenth anniversary of the applicable grant date.

We  have  issued  two  types  of  employee  stock-based  awards,  standard  and  two-tier.  Our  standard  stock-based  awards  vest  solely  on  a  service-based
condition. For these awards, we recognize stock-based compensation based on the grant date fair value of the awards and recognize that cost using the
straight-line method over the requisite service period of the award. Two-tier employee stock-based awards contained both a service-based condition and
performance  condition,  defined  as  the  earlier  of  (i)  an  acquisition  or  change  in  control  of  the  company  or  (ii)  upon  the  occurrence  of  our  initial  public
offering. A change in control event and effective registration event was not deemed probable until consummated; accordingly, no expense was recorded
related  to  two-tier  stock-based  awards  until  the  performance  condition  became  probable  of  occurring.  Awards  that  contained  both  service-based  and
performance conditions were recognized using the accelerated attribution method once the performance condition was probable of occurring. The service-
based condition is generally a service period of four years. Upon closing our IPO, we recorded cumulative share-based compensation expense using the
accumulated attribution method for two-tier employee stock-based awards for which the service condition had been satisfied at that date.

The fair value of options, which vest in accordance with service schedules, is estimated on the date of grant using the Black-Scholes option pricing
model. The absence of an active market for our common stock requires us to estimate the fair value of our common stock for purposes of granting stock
options and for determining stock-based compensation expense for the periods presented. We obtained contemporaneous third-party valuations to assist in
determining  the  estimated  fair  value  of  our  common  stock.  These  contemporaneous  third-party  valuations  used  the  methodologies,  approaches,  and
assumptions consistent with the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants Practice Guide, Valuation of Privately-Held-Company Equity Securities
Issued as Compensation. Expected volatilities are based on historical volatilities of comparable companies. The expected term of the options is based on
the simplified method outlined in the SEC Staff accounting guidance, under which we estimate the term as the average of the option’s contractual term and
the option’s weighted average vesting period. The risk-free rate represents the yield on U.S. Treasury bonds with maturity equal to the expected term of the
granted  option.  We  account  for  forfeitures  as  they  occur.  All  standard  stock  options  outstanding  at  December  31,  2020  and  2019  are  expected  to  vest
according to their specific schedules.

The measurement date for non-employee awards is the date of grant. The compensation expense for non-employees is recognized, without changes in
the fair value of the award, in the same period and in the same manner as though we had paid cash for the services, which is typically the vesting period of
the respective award.

The following two tables summarize our total stock-based compensation expense by award type and where the stock-based compensation expense was

recorded in our consolidated statements of operations (in thousands):

Options

Restricted stock units

Employee stock purchase plan

Restricted shares

Total stock-based compensation

2020

Year Ended December 31,
2019

2018

7,793  $

14,837  $

4,198 

21,469 

1,856 

6,839 
37,957  $

2,034 

973 

— 
17,844  $

— 

— 

— 
4,198 

$

$

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HEALTH CATALYST, INC.

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements

Cost of revenue

Sales and marketing

Research and development

General and administrative

Total stock-based compensation

2020

Year Ended December 31,
2019

2018

4,256  $

1,168  $

13,093 

8,069 

12,539 
37,957  $

3,811 

4,841 

8,024 
17,844  $

558 

1,514 

787 

1,339 
4,198 

$

$

We capitalized $0.2 million of stock-based compensation as internal-use software for the year ended December 31, 2020. We did not capitalize any
stock-based compensation expense to deferred costs for the years ended December 31, 2020, 2019, and 2018. The 2019 stock-based compensation includes
a $6.0 million cumulative catch-up of compensation expense related to the two-tier employee stock-based awards that was recorded upon satisfaction of the
performance condition on the closing date of our IPO.

Stock Options

There were no stock options granted during the year ended December, 31 2020. The fair value of our option granted during the years ended December

31, 2019 and 2018 were estimated at the grant date using the Black-Scholes option-pricing model based on the following weighted-average assumptions:

Expected volatility

Expected term (in years)

Risk-free interest rate

Expected dividends

Year Ended December 31,

2019
43.8%-44.5%

6.3
2.4%-2.5%

—

2018

43.6%-47.6%

6.3

2.5%-3.0%

—

A summary of the share option activity under the Health Catalyst Stock Plan for the year ended December 31, 2020, is as follows:

Outstanding at December 31, 2019

Options exercised

Options cancelled/forfeited

Outstanding at December 31, 2020

Vested and expected to vest as of December 31, 2020

Vested and exercisable as of December 31, 2020

Time-Based
Option Shares

Weighted
Average
Exercise Price

7,847,716  $

(3,748,719)

(206,061)
3,892,936  $
3,892,936  $

1,976,824  $

10.67 

9.67 

11.71 

11.58 

11.58 

10.68 

Weighted
Average
Remaining
Contractual Life
in Years

Aggregate
Intrinsic Value

7.1 $

188,573,947 

7.0 $

7.0 $

6.2 $

123,304,540 

123,304,540 

64,381,071 

There were no stock options granted during the year ended December 31, 2020. The weighted-average grant-date fair value for stock options granted
during the years ended December 31, 2019 and 2018 was $9.31, and $5.30, respectively. The aggregate intrinsic value of stock options exercised was $83.2
million,  $6.5  million,  and  $10.9  million  for  the  years  ended  December  31,  2020,  2019,  and  2018,  respectively.  The  total  grant-date  fair  value  of  stock
options  vested  during  the  years  ended  December  31,  2020,  2019,  and  2018  was  $9.9  million,  $8.1  million,  and  $3.3  million,  respectively.  As  of
December 31, 2020, approximately $7.8 million of unrecognized compensation expense related to our stock options is expected to be recognized over a
weighted-average period of 1.6 years.

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Restricted Stock Units

HEALTH CATALYST, INC.

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements

The service-based condition for RSUs is satisfied over four years with a cliff vesting period of one year and quarterly vesting thereafter. The following

table sets forth the outstanding RSUs and related activity for the year ended December 31, 2020:

Unvested and outstanding at January 1, 2020

RSUs granted
RSUs vested
RSUs forfeited

Unvested and outstanding at December 31, 2020

Restricted Stock
Units

Weighted Average
Grant Date Fair
Value

503,861  $

1,956,423 
(534,057)
(86,229)
1,839,998  $

37.57 
33.59 
35.33 
33.70 

34.17 

As  of  December  31,  2020,  we  had  $57.7  million  of  unrecognized  stock-based  compensation  expense  related  to  outstanding  RSUs  expected  to  be

recognized over a weighted-average period of 2.9 years.

Employee Stock Purchase Plan

In  connection  with  our  IPO  in  July  2019,  our  board  of  directors  adopted  the  ESPP  and  a  total  of  750,000  shares  of  common  stock  were  initially
reserved for issuance under the ESPP. The number of shares of common stock available for issuance under the ESPP will be increased on the first day of
each calendar year beginning January 1, 2020 and each year thereafter until the ESPP terminates. The number of shares of common stock reserved and
available for issuance under the ESPP shall be cumulatively increased by the least of (i) 750,000 shares, (ii) 1% of the number of shares of common stock
issued and outstanding on the immediately preceding December 31, and (iii) such lesser number of shares of common stock as determined by the ESPP
Administrator.

The ESPP generally provides for six-month offering periods, the exception being the first offering period. The offering periods generally start on the
first trading day after June 30 and December 31 of each year. The first offering period began on the IPO date and ended on December 31, 2019. The ESPP
permits participants to elect to purchase shares of common stock through fixed percentage contributions from eligible compensation during each offering
period, not to exceed 15% of the eligible compensation a participant receives during an offering period and not to accrue at a rate which exceeds $25,000 of
the fair value of the stock (determined on the first date of the offering period) for each calendar year. A participant may purchase the lowest of (a) a number
of shares of common stock determined by dividing such participant’s accumulated payroll deductions on the exercise date by the option price, (b) 2,500
shares; or (c) such other lesser maximum number of shares as shall have been established by the Administrator in advance of the offering period.

Amounts  deducted  and  accumulated  by  the  participant  will  be  used  to  purchase  shares  of  common  stock  at  the  end  of  each  offering  period.  The
purchase price of the shares will be 85% of the lower of the fair value of common stock on the first trading day of each offering period or on the purchase
date, except for the first offering period, for which the purchase price will be 85% of the lower of (i) the IPO price or (ii) the fair value of common stock on
the purchase date. Participants may end their participation at any time during an offering period and will be paid their accumulated contributions that have
not been used to purchase shares of common stock. Participation ends automatically upon termination of employment.

The fair value of the purchase right for the ESPP option component is estimated on the date of grant using the Black-Scholes model with the following

assumptions for the years ended December 31, 2020 and 2019:

Expected volatility
Expected term (in years)
Risk-free interest rate
Expected dividends

Year Ended December 31,

2020
54.9%-79.8%
0.5
0.2%-1.6%
—

2019
44.2%
0.4
2.1%
—

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HEALTH CATALYST, INC.

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements

During the year ended December 31, 2020, we issued 173,989 shares under the ESPP, with a weighted-average purchase price per share of $24.56.
Total cash proceeds from the purchase of shares under the ESPP in 2020 were $4.3 million. As of December 31, 2020, 808,561 shares are reserved for
future issuance under the ESPP.

Restricted Shares

As part of the Able Health acquisition that closed on February 21, 2020, 179,392 shares of our common stock were issued pursuant to the terms of the
acquisition agreement and are a stock-based compensation arrangement subject to a restriction agreement. The vesting of those shares is subject to one year
of continuous service by the applicable team members and shall vest on the one-year anniversary of the acquisition closing date.

As part of the Vitalware acquisition that closed on September 1, 2020, 203,997 shares of our common stock were issued pursuant to the terms of the
acquisition agreement and are a stock-based compensation arrangement subject to a restriction agreement. 75%  of  these  restricted  shares  will  vest  on  a
monthly basis over a term of approximately one year with the remaining 25% vesting on the one-year anniversary of the acquisition closing date. As of
December  31,  2020,  51,000  of  these  restricted  shares  had  vested.  As  of  December  31,  2020,  we  had  $5.1  million  of  unrecognized  stock-based
compensation expense related to outstanding restricted shares expected to be recognized over a weighted average period of 0.6 years.

16. Income Taxes

For the years ended December 31, 2020, 2019, and 2018, the income tax provision (benefit) consisted of the following (in thousands):
Year Ended December 31,
2019

2020

2018

Current taxes:

Federal

Foreign

State

Total current tax provision

Deferred taxes:

Federal

State

Total deferred provision (benefit)

Total income tax provision (benefit)

$

(11) $

11  $

(2)

92 

79 

(1,044)

(229)

(1,273)
(1,194) $

$

10 

81 

102 

33 

7 

40 
142  $

— 

— 

28 

28 

(135)

(28)

(163)
(135)

A reconciliation of the statutory U.S. federal income tax rate to our effective income tax rate is as follows:

Tax at U.S. statutory rates

State income tax, net of federal tax effect

Federal research and development credits

Stock-based compensation
Contingent consideration
Change in valuation allowance

Other, net

Effective income tax rate

2020

Year Ended December 31,
2019

2018

21.0 %

21.0 %

21.0 %

0.1 

3.4 

8.4 
0.9 

(32.5)

(0.3)

1.0 %

(0.1)

17.2 

(1.5)
— 

(36.6)

(0.2)

— 

0.7 

(0.4)
— 

(20.9)

(0.2)

(0.2)%

0.2 %

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HEALTH CATALYST, INC.

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements

The  tax  effects  of  temporary  differences  that  give  rise  to  significant  portions  of  the  deferred  tax  assets  and  liabilities  were  as  follows  as  of

December 31, 2020 and 2019 (in thousands):

Deferred income tax assets:

Net operating loss carryforwards

Research and development credits

Intangible assets

Stock-based compensation

Deferred revenue

Interest limitation carryforward

Operating lease liabilities
Contingent consideration
Deferred payroll
Property and equipment

Accrued expenses

Allowance for bad debt

Other

Total deferred income tax assets

Valuation allowance

Net deferred income tax assets

Deferred income tax liabilities:

Prepaid expenses
Deferred commissions
Convertible debt
Operating lease right-of-use assets

Deferred contract costs

Indefinite-lived intangible assets

Total deferred income tax liabilities

Net deferred income tax liabilities

As of December 31,

2020

2019

$

106,320  $

22,311 

665 

3,344 

1,505 

4,746 

6,788 
4,882 
1,108 

423 

308 

305 

60 

152,765 

(130,080)

22,685 

(1,928)
(478)
(13,864)

(6,289)

(126)

(49)

(22,734)

(49) $

$

68,643 

16,348 

5,354 

4,562 

1,779 

1,983 

1,219 
— 
— 

511 

556 

106 

52 

101,113 

(98,370)

2,743 

(1,537)
— 
— 

(967)

(239)

(41)

(2,784)
(41)

We account for deferred taxes under ASC 740, Income Taxes, which requires a reduction of the carrying amounts of deferred tax assets by a valuation
allowance  if,  based  on  available  evidence,  it  is  more  likely  than  not  that  such  assets  will  not  be  realized.  Accordingly,  the  need  to  establish  valuation
allowances  for  deferred  tax  assets  is  assessed  periodically  based  on  the  ASC  740  more-likely-than-not  realization  threshold  criterion.  This  assessment
considers  matters  such  as  future  reversals  of  existing  taxable  temporary  differences,  projected  future  taxable  income,  tax-planning  strategies,  legislative
developments,  and  results  of  recent  operations.  The  evaluation  of  the  recoverability  of  the  deferred  tax  assets  requires  that  we  weigh  all  positive  and
negative evidence to reach a conclusion that it is more likely than not that all or some portion of the deferred tax assets will not be realized. The weight
given to the evidence is commensurate with the extent to which it can be objectively verified.

We have provided a full valuation allowance for our net deferred tax assets at December 31, 2020 and 2019, due to the uncertainty surrounding the
future realization of such assets and the cumulative losses we have generated. Therefore, no benefit has been recognized in the financial statements for the
net operating loss carryforwards and other deferred tax assets. During the years ended December 31, 2020 and 2019, respectively, the valuation allowance
increased by $31.7 million and $28.1 million, respectively.

As of December 31, 2020, we had approximately $419.6 million of consolidated federal net operating loss carryforwards and $334.6 million of state
net operating loss carryforwards available to offset future taxable income, respectively. If unused, the federal and state net operating loss carryforwards will
begin to expire in 2032 and 2023, respectively.

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HEALTH CATALYST, INC.

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements

We  have  federal  research  and  development  credit  carryforwards  of  $20.9  million  and  state  research  and  development  credit  carryforwards  of  $8.9
million, which if not utilized will begin to expire in 2032 and 2025, respectively. To the extent we do not utilize our carryforwards within the applicable
statutory carryforward periods, either because of ownership changes and limitations under Code Sections 382 and 383 and similar state laws or the lack of
sufficient taxable income, the carryforwards will expire unused.

Utilization of net operating loss carryforwards and credits may be subject to a substantial annual limitation due to the ownership change limitations
provided by the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the "IRC"), and similar state provisions. The Company most recently performed a detailed
analysis in March 2019 to determine whether an ownership change under Section 382 of the IRC had occurred or will occur. An update of this analysis has
not been performed since that time. The effect of an ownership change would be the imposition of an annual limitation on the use of net operating loss and
or income tax credit carryforwards attributable to periods before the change.

We  file  federal  and  state  income  tax  returns  in  jurisdictions  with  varying  statutes  of  limitations.  With  few  exceptions,  we  are  no  longer  subject  to

federal or state income tax examinations by tax authorities for tax years prior to 2017 and 2016, respectively.

We recognize tax benefits from uncertain tax positions when it is more likely than not, based on the technical merits, that the position will be sustained
upon examination. The following table summarizes the activity related to unrecognized tax benefits for the years ended December 31, 2020 and 2019 (in
thousands):

Beginning balance

Increase (decrease) in unrecognized tax benefits taken in prior years

Increase in unrecognized tax benefits related to the current year

Ending balance

Year Ended December 31,
2019

2018

2020

$

$

1,816  $

2,372  $

2,228 

1,534 
5,578  $

(957)

401 
1,816  $

1,939 

— 

433 
2,372 

The total amount of unrecognized tax benefits that, if recognized, would affect the effective tax rate is zero due to the valuation allowance. We do not
anticipate material changes in the total amount of our unrecognized tax benefits within 12 months of the reporting date. Our policy is to accrue interest and
penalties related to unrecognized tax benefits within the provision for income taxes.  However, as of December 31, 2020 and 2019, we have not accrued
interest and penalties because we have net operating loss carryforwards.

17. Contingencies

Litigation

Liabilities for loss contingencies arising from claims, assessments, litigation, fines, penalties, and other sources are recorded when it is probable that a
liability  has  been  incurred  and  the  amount  can  be  reasonably  estimated.  Legal  costs  incurred  in  connection  with  loss  contingencies  are  expensed  as
incurred.

We are involved in legal proceedings from time to time that arise in the normal course of business. As of December 31, 2020, there were no significant

outstanding claims against us.

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HEALTH CATALYST, INC.

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements

18. Deferred Revenue and Performance Obligations

Deferred  revenue  includes  advance  customer  payments  and  billings  in  excess  of  revenue  recognized.  For  the  year  ended  December  31,  2020,

approximately 14% of the revenue recognized was included in deferred revenue at the beginning of the period.

Transaction price allocated to the remaining performance obligations

Most of our technology and professional services contracts have up to a three-year term, of which the vast majority are terminable after one year upon
90 days' notice. For arrangements that do not allow the customer to cancel within one year or less, we expect to recognize $89.4 million of revenue on
unsatisfied performance obligations as of December 31, 2020. We expect to recognize approximately 79% of the remaining performance obligations over
the next 24 months, with the balance recognized thereafter.

19. Related Parties

We  have  entered  into  arrangements  with  customers  where  the  customer’s  management  is  currently  or  was  previously  a  member  of  our  board  of
directors. An executive officer at Allina Health served on our board of directors until December 31, 2018. The board seat vacated by the Allina Health
executive officer was replaced in January 2018 by an executive of a Mass General Brigham (formerly Partners Healthcare) affiliate.

For the years ended December 31, 2020, 2019, and 2018, we recognized $2.6 million, $3.0 million, and $3.8 million in revenue from related parties,

respectively.

As of December 31, 2020 and 2019, we had receivables from related parties of $0.6 million and $0.6 million, respectively, and deferred revenue with
related parties of $0.7 million and $0.5 million, respectively. As of December 31, 2019, we also had acquisition-related consideration payable to a related
party for a prior year asset acquisition. This asset acquisition occurred prior to this entity becoming a related party. The acquisition-related consideration
payable to this related party was $1.2 million as of December 31, 2019, which was paid in full during the year ended December 31, 2020.

We  have  also  entered  into  revenue  arrangements  with  customers  that  are  also  our  investors.  None  of  these  customers  hold  a  significant  amount  of

ownership in our equity interests.

20. Employee Benefit Plans

We have a 401(k) defined contribution plan covering eligible employees. Our contributions were $3.2 million, $5.3 million, and $4.6 million for the
years ended December 31, 2020, 2019, and 2018, respectively. As of December 31, 2020 and 2019, we matched 100% of the first 3% and 6%, respectively,
of an employees’ 401(k) plan contributions.

21. Segments

We operate our business in two operating segments that also represent our reportable segments. Our business is organized based on our technology

offerings and professional services. Accordingly, our segments are:

•

•

Technology - Our technology segment (Technology) includes our data platform, analytics applications and support services. Technology generates
revenues primarily from contracts that are cloud-based subscription arrangements, time-based license arrangements, and maintenance and support
fees; and

Professional  Services  -  Our  professional  services  segment  (Professional  Services)  is  generally  the  combination  of  analytics,  implementation,
strategic advisory, outsource, and improvement services to deliver expertise to our customers to more fully configure and utilize the benefits of our
Technology offerings.

Revenues  and  cost  of  revenues  generally  are  directly  attributed  to  our  segments.  All  segment  revenues  are  from  our  external  customers.  Asset  and

other balance sheet information at the segment level is not reported to our Chief Operating Decision Maker.

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HEALTH CATALYST, INC.

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements

Segment revenue and Adjusted Gross Profit for the years ended December 31, 2020, 2019, and 2018 were as follows (in thousands):
Year Ended December 31,
2019

2020

2018

Revenue:

Technology

Professional Services

Total revenue

Adjusted Gross Profit:

Technology

Professional Services

Total reportable segments Adjusted Gross Profit

Less Adjusted Gross Profit reconciling items:

Stock-based compensation

Tender offer payments deemed compensation

(1)

Post-acquisition restructuring costs

(2)

Less other reconciling items:

Sales and marketing

Research and development

General and administrative

Depreciation and amortization

Debt extinguishment costs

Interest and other expense, net

Net loss before income taxes

$

$

$

110,467  $

83,975  $

78,378 

70,966 

188,845  $

154,941  $

57,224 

55,350 

112,574 

2020

Year Ended December 31,
2019

2018

75,666  $

56,378  $

19,358 

95,024 

(4,256)

— 

— 

(55,411)

(53,517)

(59,240)

(18,725)

(8,514)

24,494 

80,872 

(1,168)

— 

(108)

(47,284)

(46,252)

(31,713)

(9,212)

(1,670)

(11,572)
(116,211) $

$

(3,419)
(59,954) $

37,901 

16,028 

53,929 

(558)

(312)

(337)

(44,123)

(38,592)

(22,690)

(7,412)

— 

(2,024)
(62,119)

____________________
(1) Tender offer payments deemed compensation included in the Adjusted Gross Profit reconciliation above relate to employee compensation from repurchases of common stock at a price in

excess of its estimated fair value. For additional details refer to Note 13 in the consolidated financial statements.

(2) Post-acquisition restructuring costs included in the Adjusted Gross Profit reconciliation above relate to severance charges following the acquisition of Medicity.

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Item 9. Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants on Accounting and Financial Disclosure

None.

Item 9A. Controls and Procedures

Evaluation of Disclosure Controls and Procedures

Our  management,  with  the  participation  of  our  principal  executive  officer  and  principal  financial  officer,  has  evaluated  the  effectiveness  of  our
disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the Exchange
Act)), as of the end of the period covered by this Annual Report on Form 10-K. Based on such evaluation, our principal executive officer and principal
financial officer have concluded that as of such date, our disclosure controls and procedures were effective at a reasonable assurance level.

Management's Report on Internal Control Over Financial Reporting

Our management is responsible for establishing and maintaining adequate internal controls over financial reporting. Our management, including the
CEO and CFO, conducted an evaluation of the effectiveness of our internal control over financial reporting, as defined in Rule 13a-15(f) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. Our internal control over financial reporting is designed to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of
financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. Because
of its inherent limitations, internal control over financial reporting may not prevent or detect misstatements. Projections of any evaluation of effectiveness
to future periods are subject to the risk that controls may become inadequate because of changes in conditions, or that the degree of compliance with the
policies may deteriorate.

Management conducted an evaluation of the effectiveness of our internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2020 using the criteria
issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (COSO) in Internal Control—Integrated Framework (2013). Based on
the results of this evaluation, our management concluded that our internal control over financial reporting was effective as of December 31, 2020.

The effectiveness of our internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2020 has been audited by Ernst & Young LLP, an independent

registered public accounting firm, as stated in their report which is provided in Part II, Item 8 of this Annual Report on Form 10-K.

Changes in Internal Control Over Financial Reporting

There  was  no  change  in  our  internal  control  over  financial  reporting  (as  defined  in  Rules  13a-15(f)  and  15d-15(f)  under  the  Exchange  Act)  that
occurred during the period covered by the three months ended December 31, 2020 that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect,
our internal control over financial reporting.

Inherent Limitations on Effectiveness of Disclosure Controls and Procedures

Our management, including our principal executive officer and principal financial officer, do not expect that our disclosure controls and procedures or
our internal control over financial reporting will prevent all errors and all fraud. A control system, no matter how well designed and operated, can provide
only reasonable, not absolute, assurance that the objectives of the control system are met. Further, the design of a control system must reflect the fact that
there  are  resource  constraints,  and  the  benefits  of  controls  must  be  considered  relative  to  their  costs.  Because  of  the  inherent  limitations  in  all  control
systems, no evaluation of controls can provide absolute assurance that all control issues and instances of fraud, if any, have been detected. These inherent
limitations  include  the  realities  that  judgments  in  decision-making  can  be  faulty,  and  that  breakdowns  can  occur  because  of  a  simple  error  or  mistake.
Additionally, controls can be circumvented by the individual acts of some persons, by collusion of two or more people or by management override of the
controls. The design of any system of controls is also based in part upon certain assumptions about the likelihood of future events, and there can be no
assurance  that  any  design  will  succeed  in  achieving  its  stated  goals  under  all  potential  future  conditions;  over  time,  controls  may  become  inadequate
because of changes in conditions, or the degree of compliance with policies or procedures may deteriorate. Due to inherent limitations in a cost-effective
control system, misstatements due to error or fraud may occur and not be detected.

130

Table of Contents

Item 9B. Other Information

None.

Item 10. Directors, Executive Officers, and Corporate Governance

PART III

The information required by this item is incorporated by reference to our proxy statement relating to our 2021 Annual Meeting of Stockholders. The

proxy statement will be filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission within 120 days of the year ended December 31, 2020.

Our  board  of  directors  has  adopted  a  Code  of  Business  Conduct  and  Ethics,  or  the  Code  of  Conduct,  that  applies  to  all  officers,  directors,  and
employees, which is available on our website at ir.healthcatalyst.com under "Corporate Governance." The nominating and corporate governance committee
of our board of directors is responsible for overseeing the Code of Conduct and must approve any waivers of the Code of Conduct for employees, executive
officers, and directors. We expect that any amendments to the Code of Conduct, or any waivers of its requirements, will be disclosed on our website, as
required by applicable law or the Nasdaq listing standards.

Item 11. Executive Compensation

The information required by this item is incorporated by reference to our proxy statement relating to our 2021 Annual Meeting of Stockholders. The

proxy statement will be filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission within 120 days of the year ended December 31, 2020.

Item 12. Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management and Related Stockholder Matters

The information required by this item is incorporated by reference to our proxy statement relating to our 2021 Annual Meeting of Stockholders. The

proxy statement will be filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission within 120 days of the year ended December 31, 2020.

Item 13. Certain Relationships and Related Transactions, and Director Independence

The information required by this item is incorporated by reference to our proxy statement relating to our 2021 Annual Meeting of Stockholders. The

proxy statement will be filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission within 120 days of the year ended December 31, 2020.

Item 14. Principal Accountant Fees and Services

The information required by this item is incorporated by reference to our proxy statement relating to our 2021 Annual Meeting of Stockholders. The

proxy statement will be filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission within 120 days of the year ended December 31, 2020.

Item 15. Exhibits and Financial Statement Schedules

The following documents are filed as a part of this Annual Report on Form 10-K:

(a) Financial Statements

PART IV

The information concerning our financial statements, including the Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm required by this item is
incorporated  by  reference  herein  to  the  section  of  this  Annual  Report  on  Form  10-K  in  Item  8,  entitled  “Consolidated  Financial  Statements  and
Supplementary Data.”

(b) Financial Statement Schedules

All  schedules  have  been  omitted  because  the  required  information  is  not  present  or  not  present  in  amounts  sufficient  to  require  submission  of  the
schedules,  or  because  the  information  required  is  included  in  the  section  of  this  Annual  Report  on  Form  10-K  Item  8,  entitled  “Consolidated  Financial
Statements and Supplementary Data.”

131

(c) Exhibits

See the Exhibit Index immediately preceding the signature page of this Annual Report on Form 10-K.

Item 16. Form 10-K Summary

None.

132

Exhibit
Number

Description of Document

Incorporated by
Reference from Form

Incorporated by Reference
from Exhibit Number

EXHIBIT INDEX

3.1

3.2

4.1

4.2

4.3

4.4

4.5

4.6

4.7

4.8

10.1

10.2

10.3

10.4#

10.5#

10.6#

10.7#

10.8#

10.9#

10.10#

10.11#

10.12#

Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation.

Amended and Restated Bylaws.

Form of common stock certificate.

Fifth Amended and Restated Registration Agreement, dated
February 6, 2019, by and among the Registrant and certain of
its stockholders.

Fifth Amended and Restated Investor Rights Agreement,
dated February 6, 2019, by and among the Registrant and
certain of its stockholders.

Fifth Amended and Restated Stockholders Agreement, dated
February 6, 2019, by and among the Registrant and certain of
its stockholders.

Amendment No. 1 to Financing Documents, dated July 10,
2019, by and among the Registrant and certain of its
stockholders.

Description of securities registered under Section 12 of the
Exchange Act.

Indenture, dated as of April 14, 2020, by and between the
Registrant and U.S. Bank National Association, as Trustee.

Form of Global Note, representing Health Catalyst, Inc.'s
2.50% Convertible Senior Notes due 2025 (included as
Exhibit A to the Indenture filed as Exhibit 4.1).

Lease Agreement, dated March 25, 2020, by and between the
Registrant and Riverpark Six, LLC.

Form of Confirmation for Capped Call Transactions

Credit Agreement, dated February 6, 2019, by and between
the Registrant and OrbiMed Royalty Opportunities II, LP.

Non-Employee Director Compensation Policy.

2019 Stock Option and Incentive Plan, and forms of
agreements thereunder.

Amended and Restated 2011 Stock Incentive Plan, and forms
of agreements thereunder.

2019 Employee Stock Purchase Plan.

Executive Severance Plan.

Offer Letter, dated September 26, 2011, between the
Registrant and Daniel Burton.

S-1/A

S-1/A

S-1/A

S-1

S-1

S-1

S-1/A

10-K

8-K

8-K

10-Q

8-K

S-1

10-Q

S-1/A

S-1

S-1/A

S-1/A

S-1

Offer Letter, dated March 27, 2014, between the Registrant
and Bryan Hunt.

Filed herewith

Offer Letter, dated May 20, 2013, between the Registrant and
J. Patrick Nelli.

Offer Letter, dated September 26, 2011, between the
Registrant and Paul Horstmeier.

S-1

S-1

133

3.2

3.4

4.1

4.2

4.3

4.4

4.5

4.6

4.1

4.2

10.1

10.1

10.5

10.1

10.12

10.13

10.14

10.16

10.6

10.8

10.9

Date Filed

July 12, 2019

July 12, 2019

July 12, 2019

June 27, 2019

June 27, 2019

June 27, 2019

July 12, 2019

February 28, 2020

April 14, 2020

April 14, 2020

May 13, 2020

April 14, 2020

June 27, 2019

August 23, 2019

July 12, 2019

June 27, 2019

July 12, 2019

July 12, 2019

June 27, 2019

June 27, 2019

June 27, 2019

10.10

10.11

10.15

10.18

June 27, 2019

June 27, 2019

June 27, 2019

June 27, 2019

10.13#

10.14#

10.15#

10.16#

10.17#

21.1

23.1

24.1

31.1

31.2

32.1^

Offer Letter, dated May 22, 2013, between the Registrant and
Linda Llewelyn.

Offer Letter, dated December 3, 2015, between the Registrant
and Daniel Orenstein.

S-1

S-1

Offer Letter, dated April 4, 2013, between the Registrant and
Jason Alger.

Filed herewith

Senior Executive Cash Incentive Bonus Plan.

Form of Indemnification Agreement, between the Registrant
and each of its executive officers and directors.

Subsidiaries of Registrant.

Consent of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm.

Power of Attorney (included on signature page to this Annual
Report on Form 10-K).

Certification of Chief Executive Officer pursuant to
Exchange Act Rules 13a-14(a) and 15d-14(a), as adopted
pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002.

Certification of Chief Financial Officer pursuant to Exchange
Act Rules 13a-14(a) and 15d-14(a), as adopted pursuant to
Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002.

Certifications of the Chief Executive Officer and Chief
Financial Officer pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350, as
adopted pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act
of 2002.

S-1

S-1

Filed herewith

Filed herewith

Filed herewith

Filed herewith

Filed herewith

Furnished herewith

101.SCH

Inline XBRL Taxonomy Extension Schema Document

101.CAL

101.DEF

101.LAB

101.PRE

104

Inline XBRL Taxonomy Extension Calculation Linkbase
Document

Inline XBRL Taxonomy Extension Definition Linkbase
Document

Inline XBRL Taxonomy Extension Label Linkbase
Document

Inline XBRL Taxonomy Extension Presentation Linkbase
Document

Cover Page Interactive Data File (formatted as inline XBRL
with applicable taxonomy extension information contained in
Exhibits 101)

Filed herewith

Filed herewith

Filed herewith

Filed herewith

Filed herewith

Filed herewith

___________________

#    Indicates management contract or compensatory plan.

^    The certifications attached as Exhibit 32.1 accompanying this Annual Report on Form 10-K, are deemed furnished and not filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission and are not to
be incorporated by reference into any filing of Health Catalyst, Inc. under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, or the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, whether made before
or after the date of this Annual Report on Form 10-K, irrespective of any general incorporation language contained in such filing.

134

Pursuant  to  the  requirements  of  the  Securities  Exchange  Act  of  1934,  the  registrant  has  duly  caused  this  report  to  be  signed  on  its  behalf  by  the

undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.

SIGNATURES

HEALTH CATALYST, INC.

Date: 2/25/2021

By:

/s/ Bryan Hunt

Bryan Hunt

Chief Financial Officer
(Principal Financial Officer)

135

POWER OF ATTORNEY

KNOW ALL PERSONS BY THESE PRESENTS, that each person whose signature appears below constitutes and appoints each of Daniel Burton,
Bryan Hunt, Jason Alger, and Daniel Orenstein, with full power of substitution and resubstitution, as his or her true and lawful attorney-in-fact and agent to
act in his or her name, place and stead and to execute in the name and on behalf of each person, individually and in each capacity stated below, and to file,
any and all documents in connection therewith, with the Securities and Exchange Commission, granting unto said attorney-in-fact and agents, and each of
them, full power and authority to do and perform each and every act and thing, ratifying and confirming all that said attorney-in-fact and agents or any of
them or their and his or her substitute or substitutes, may lawfully do or cause to be done by virtue thereof.

Pursuant  to  the  requirements  of  the  Securities  Exchange  Act  of  1934,  as  amended,  this  Report  has  been  signed  below  by  the  following  persons  on

behalf of the Registrant in the capacities and on the dates indicated.

Signature

Title

/s/ Daniel Burton

Daniel Burton

/s/ Bryan Hunt

Bryan Hunt

/s/ Jason Alger

Jason Alger

/s/ Fraser Bullock

Fraser Bullock

/s/ Timothy G. Ferris

Timothy G. Ferris

/s/ Duncan Gallagher

Duncan Gallagher

/s/ John A. Kane

John A. Kane

/s/ Julie Larson-Green

Julie Larson-Green

/s/ Anita V. Pramoda

Anita V. Pramoda

/s/ S. Dawn Smith

S. Dawn Smith

/s/ Mark Templeton

Mark Templeton

Chief Executive Officer and Director

(Principal Executive Officer)

Chief Financial Officer

(Principal Financial Officer)

Chief Accounting Officer

(Principal Accounting Officer)

Director

Director

Director

Director

Director

Director

Director

Director

136

Date

2/25/2021

2/25/2021

2/25/2021

2/25/2021

2/25/2021

2/25/2021

2/25/2021

2/25/2021

2/25/2021

2/25/2021

2/25/2021

Exhibit 10.10

Thursday, March 27, 2014

Dear Bryan Hunt,

We are pleased to extend to you this offer of full-time employment with Health Catalyst. We are confident that your skills, experience and hard work will
contribute mean ingfu ll y to the success of the company. This offer is subject to the terms and conditions set forth in this offer. This letter does not
represent a contract or agreement for employment; and employment with Health Catalyst ("HC") is at will.

Position: Technical Resource Coordinator
Base salary: $100,000
Start date: 4/07

Division/Department: Product Development
FLSA status: Exempt
Location: Utah Office

Business hours: 8:00 AM - 5:00 PM, Monday through Friday.

In addition to the base salary, this full-time employment offer includes the following benefit programs:

Bonus
You will be eligible to receive a bonus equal to 5% of your annual base salary subject to the individual, department, and company performance initiatives.
This bonus will be prorated based upon the number of days you are employed during the fiscal year. The bonus for any fiscal year will be paid every 6
months, after approval from the Board of Directors and He's books for that period have been closed. The bonus will only be paid if you are employed by
HC at the time of bonus determination.

Insurance Plans
Eligibility begins on the first day of the month following your start date.

• Medical and Dental Insurance: HC pays 100% of the monthly insurance premium for the employee and 50% of the adjusted premium for

dependents and spouse. HC offers both a Traditional and HSA-High Deductible Health Plan options. HC also provides an employer contribution
to those enrolled in the HSA-HDHP.

• Vision Insurance: The Vision Pla n is an employee elective plan. The insurance premium is the responsibility of the employee. Premiums may be

•
•

deducted as a pre-tax deduction on a per-pay period basis.
Life, Accidental Death and Dismemberment, and Disability Insurance: These insurance programs are paid 100% by HC.
Flexible Spending Account: HC offers FSAs for medical, limited purpose, dependent care and commuter expense accounts. FSAs allow you to
contribute pre-tax dollars which can be used to pay for qualifying expenses not otherwise covered under normal health-related insurance plans.
The Commuter Expense FSA allows you to set aside pre-tax dollars for use in qualifying commuter expenses.

Paid Time Off

• Holiday Pay: Eleven days of time off with pay according to the annual holiday schedule.
•

Paid Time Off: PTO eligibility begins on date of hire and may be used on an as needed basis. There is no set limit to PTO and PTO is not paid out
upon an employee 's termination.

Retirement Plan
Health Catalyst off ers a Safe Harbor 401K Retirement Plan. Eligibility begins 90-days after employment. This Safe Harbor Plan allows for employee and
employer contributions. HC matches employee contributions dollar-

for-dollar up to 6% of annual base salary. The HC 401K Plan is an auto-enrollment plan with a 6% default employee contribution rate.

All benefits are subject to change. Additional details about each benefit are available in the Employee Handbook or by speaking directly with the Human
Resource office.

Payroll
Pay checks are issued on a bi-weekly basis with a total of 26 pay periods per calendar year. You are encouraged to participate in our direct deposit program
as our payroll is outsourced.

EICA
With acceptance of this employment offer, you will be asked to sign this Employment Offer Letter and Agreement and an Employee Invention and
Confidentiality Agreement (EICA) and agree to the on-going compliance with such agreements as a condition of employment. These agreements contain
"employment at will", "non-compete" and "non-disclosure" provisions. A copy of the EICA is available for your review upon request in advance of
accepting employment. Otherwise, a personalized copy of the EICA will be provided to you prior to your start date.

Background Check
A background check will be conducted through a third party vendor, Justifacts Credential Verifications. This background check is a comprehensive
criminal records investigation, and you will be asked to complete a consent form before completing the check. This offer will be contingent upon an
acceptable completion of the background check.

At Will Employment
Employment with HC is "at-will." This means that it is not for any specified period of time and can be terminated by you or by HC at any time, with or
without advance notice or additional payment, and for any or no particular reason or cause. It also means that your job duties, title and responsibility and
reporting level, compensation and benefits, as well as He's personnel policies and procedures, may be changed at any time, with or without notice, in the
sole and absolute discretion of HC.

The "at-will" nature of your employment shall remain unchanged during your tenure as an employee and may not be changed, except in an express writing
signed by you and by a duly authorized officer of HC.

In addition, we are required by law to obtain documentation within the first three days of employment that you are eligible to work in the United States.
Please bring copies of your eligibility documentation on your first day of employment. Enclosed is a copy of INS Form 1-9, which contains a list of
acceptable documentation.

If you accept this offer, this letter and the written agreements referenced in this letter shall constitute the complete agreement between you and HC with
respect to the initial terms and conditions of your employment. Any representations not contained in this letter, or contrary to those contained in this letter
(whether written or oral), that may have been made to you are expressly cancelled and superseded by this offer. Except as otherwise specified in this letter,
the terms and conditions of your employment pursuant to this letter may not be changed, except by a writing signed by a duly authorized officer of HC.

HC reserves the right to provide you with additional policies in addition to any existing written policies that would apply to the terms of your employment.

Should your position, compensation, or benefits change over time the remaining sections of this agreement will still be valid. If any provision in this offer
or compliance by you or HC with any provision of this offer constitutes a violation of any law, or is or becomes unenforceable or void, it will be deemed
modified to the extent necessary so that it is no longer in violation of law, unenforceable or void, and such provision will be enforced to the fullest extent
permitted by law. If such modification is not possible, said provision, to the extent that it is in violation of

2

law, unenforceable or void, will be deemed severable from the remaining provisions of this offer, which provisions and terms will remain in effect.

This offer is valid until Tuesday, April 1st, by 11:00 am and requires a written response by this date and time. You should keep a copy of this letter for your
own records. If you have any questions regarding this offer, please contact our Human Resource office at 801-708-6809 at your earliest convenience.

We look forward to you joining the Health Catalyst team. Sincerely,

Linda Llewelyn
Human Resources Director
Linda.Llewelyn@healthcatalyst.com

Acknowledgement of Understanding and Acceptance
By signing below:

1.
2.

I acknowledge that I have read and understand the foregoing terms and conditions of this employment offer.
 I accept this employment offer.

Accepted by: /s/ Bryan Hunt Date: 4/1/2014

3

Exhibit 10.15

April 4, 2013

Jason Alger

Dear Jason,

We  are  pleased  to  extend  to  you  this  offer  of  full-time  employment  with  Health  Catalyst.  We  are  confident  that  your  skills,  experience  and  hard  work  will
contribute meaningfully to the success of the company. This offer is subject to the terms and conditions set forth in this offer. This letter does not represent a
contract or agreement for employment; and employment with Health Catalyst ("HC") is at will.

Position:         Controller
Base salary:         $90,000 Annualized
Start date:         April 22, 2013

Division/Department:     Finance
FLSA status:         Exempt
Location:         Corporate Office - Salt Lake City

Business hours: 8:00 AM - 5:00 PM, Monday through Friday

In addition to the base salary, this full-time employment offer includes the following benefit programs:

Bonus: You will be eligible to receive a bonus equal to 10% of your annual base salary subject to the individual, department, and company performance
initiatives. This bonus will be prorated based upon the number of days you are employed during the fiscal year. The bonus for any fiscal year will be paid
every 6 months, after approval from the Board of Directors and HC's books for that period have been dosed. The bonus will only be paid if you are employed
by HC at the time of bonus determination.

Stock Option Grant: You will also receive a Stock Option Grant for a certain number of shares of the Parent Company's Common Stock. The amount of
your option grant is set within the sole discretion of the Board of Directors, at the next applicable board meeting, but is expected to be 7500. This option is
subject to the terms and conditions applicable to options granted under the Parent's 2011 Stock incentive Plan as described in the Plan and the applicable
Stock Option Agreement. You will be vested in 25% of the option share after 12 months of continuous service, and the balance will vest in equal monthly
installments over the next 36 months of continuous service, as described in the applicable Stock Option Agreement.

Insurance Plans: Eligibility begins on the first day of the month following 30-days of employment.

• Medical and Dental insurance HC pays 100% of the monthly insurance premium for the employee and 5O% of the adjusted premium for

•

•
•

dependents and spouse. HC offers both a Traditional and HSA-High Deductible Health Plan options. HC also provides an employer contribution to
those enrolled in the HSA-HDHP
Vision Insurance: The Vision Plan is an employee elective plan. The insurance premium is the responsibility of the employee. Premiums may be
deducted as a pre-tax deduction on a per-pay period basis.
Life, Accidently Death and Dismemberment, and Disability Insurance: These insurance programs are paid 100% by HC.
Flexible Spending Account: HC offers FSAs for medical, limited purpose, dependent care and commuter expense accounts. FSAs allow you to
contribute pre-tax dollars which can be used to pay for qualifying expenses not otherwise covered under normal health-related insurance plans. The
Commuter Expense FSA allows you to set aside pre-tax dollars for use in qualifying commuter expenses.

Paid Time Off:

•
•

Holiday Pay: Ten days of time off with pay according to the annual holiday schedule, including two personal holidays.
Paid Time Off: PTO eligibility begins on your date of hire and may be used as soon as it is earned. PTO is accrued and awarded according to the
following schedule:

Accrual Period
0 - 4 years of service

5 – 9 years of service
10+ years- Maximum accrual

Hours
120

160
208

Hours Per Pay Period
4.62

6.15
8.0

Days Per Year
15

20
26

Retirement Plan: HC offers a Safe Harbor 401K Retirement Plan. Eligibility begins 90-days after employment. This Safe Harbor Plan allows for employee
and employer contributions. HC matches employee contributions dollar-for-dollar up to 4% of annual base salary. The HC 401K Plan is an auto-enrollment
plan with a 6% default employee contribution rate.

All benefits are subject to change. Additional details about each benefit are available in the Employee Handbook or by speaking directly with the Human
Resource office.

Pay checks are issued on a bi-weekly basis with a total of 26 pay periods per calendar year. You are encouraged to participate in our direct deposit program
as our payroll is outsourced.

With acceptance of this employment offer, you will be asked to sign this Employment Offer Letter and Agreement and an Employee Invention and
Confidentiality Agreement (EICA) and agree to the on-going compliance with such agreements as a condition of employment. These agreements contain
"employment at will", "non-compete" and "non-disclosure" provisions. A copy of the EICA is available for your review upon request in advance of accepting
employment. Otherwise, a personalized copy of the EICA will be provided to you prior to your start date.

At Will Employment

Employment with HC is "at-will." This means that it is not for any specified period of time and can be terminated by you or by HC at any time, with or without
advance notice or additional payment, and for any or no particular reason or cause. It also means that your job duties, title and responsibility and reporting
level, compensation and benefits, as well as HC's personnel policies and procedures, may be changed at any time, with or without notice, in the sole and
absolute discretion of HC.

The "at-will" nature of your employment shall remain unchanged during your tenure as an employee and may not be
changed, except in an express writing signed by you and by a duly authorized officer of HC.

In addition, we are required by law to obtain documentation within the first three days of employment that you are eligible to work in the United States.
Please bring copies of your eligibility documentation on your first day of employment. Enclosed is a copy of INS Form l-9, which contains a list of acceptable
documentation.

If  you  accept  this  offer,  this  letter  and  the  written  agreements  referenced  in  this  letter  shall  constitute  the  complete  agreement  between  you  and  HC  with
respect to the initial terms and conditions of your employment. Any representations not contained in this letter1 or contrary to those contained in this letter
(whether written or oral), that may have been made to you are expressly cancelled and superseded by this offer. Except as otherwise specified in this letter,
the terms and conditions of your employment pursuant to this letter may not be changed, except by a writing signed by a duly authorized officer of HC

HC reserves the right to provide you with additional policies in addition to any existing written policies that would apply to the terms of your employment.

Should your position, compensation, or benefits change over time the remaining sections of this agreement will still be valid. If any provision in this offer or
compliance by you or HC with any provision of this offer constitutes a violation of any law, or is or becomes unenforceable or void, it will be deemed modified
to the extent necessary so that it is no longer in violation of law, unenforceable or void, and such provision will be enforced to the fullest extent permitted by
law. If such modification is not possible, said provision, to the extent that it is in violation of law, unenforceable or void, will be deemed severable from the
remaining provisions of this offer, which provisions and terms win remain in effect.

This offer is valid until April 8, 2013 and requires a written response by 11:00 AM on this date. You should keep a copy of this letter for your own records. If
you have any questions regarding this offer, please contact our Human Resource office at 801-708-6809 at your earliest convenience.

We look forward to you joining the Health Catalyst team.

2

Sincerely,

Heather Eastman Human Resources
Heather.eastman@healthcatalyst.com

Acknowledgement of Understanding and Acceptance
By signing below:

1.
2.

I acknowledge that I have read and understand the foregoing terms and conditions of this employment offer
I accept this employment offer.

Accepted by: /s/ Jason Alger Date: 4/8/2013

3

Exhibit 21.1

List of Subsidiaries of Health Catalyst, Inc.

Medicity LLC (Delaware, United States)

Health Catalyst UK Ltd (England and Wales)

Health Catalyst Singapore Pte. Ltd. (Singapore)

Able Health, LLC (Delaware, United States)

Healthfinch, LLC (Delaware, United States)

Vitalware, LLC (Delaware, United States)

Exhibit 23.1

Consent of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

We consent to the incorporation by reference in the following Registration Statements:

1. Registration Statement (Form S-8 No. 333-232795) pertaining to the Amended and Restated 2011 Stock Incentive Plan, the 2019

Stock Option and Incentive Plan and the 2019 Employee Stock Purchase Plan of Health Catalyst, Inc.,

2. Registration Statement (Form S-8 No. 333-236731) pertaining to the 2019 Stock Option and Incentive Plan and the 2019 Employee

Stock Purchase Plan of Health Catalyst, Inc.;

of our reports dated February 25, 2021, with respect to the consolidated financial statements of Health Catalyst, Inc. and the effectiveness of
internal control over financial reporting of Health Catalyst, Inc. included in this Annual Report (Form 10-K) of Health Catalyst, Inc. for the
year ended December 31, 2020.

/s/ Ernst & Young LLP

Salt Lake City, UT
February 25, 2021

CERTIFICATION PURSUANT TO RULE 13a-14(a) OR 15d-14(a) OF
THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934,
AS ADOPTED PURSUANT TO SECTION 302 OF
THE SARBANES-OXLEY ACT OF 2002

Exhibit 31.1

I, Daniel Burton, certify that:

1. I have reviewed this Annual Report on Form 10-K of Health Catalyst, Inc.;

2. Based on my knowledge, this report does not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact necessary to make the
statements made, in light of the circumstances under which such statements were made, not misleading with respect to the period covered by this report;

3. Based on my knowledge, the financial statements, and other financial information included in this report, fairly present in all material respects the
financial condition, results of operations and cash flows of the registrant as of, and for, the periods presented in this report;

4. The registrant’s other certifying officer and I are responsible for establishing and maintaining disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Exchange
Act Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e)) for the registrant and have:

    (a) Designed such disclosure controls and procedures, or caused such disclosure controls and procedures to be designed under our supervision, to

ensure that material information relating to the registrant, including its consolidated subsidiaries, is made known to us by others within those entities,
particularly during the period in which this report is being prepared;

    (b) Evaluated the effectiveness of the registrant’s disclosure controls and procedures and presented in this report our conclusions about the
effectiveness of the disclosure controls and procedures, as of the end of the period covered by this report based on such evaluation; and

    (c) Disclosed in this report any change in the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting that occurred during the registrant’s most recent
fiscal quarter (the registrant’s fourth fiscal quarter in the case of an annual report) that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially
affect, the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting; and

5. The registrant’s other certifying officer and I have disclosed, based on our most recent evaluation of internal control over financial reporting, to the
registrant’s auditors and the audit committee of the registrant’s board of directors (or persons performing the equivalent functions):

    (a) All significant deficiencies and material weaknesses in the design or operation of internal control over financial reporting which are reasonably

likely to adversely affect the registrant’s ability to record, process, summarize and report financial information; and

    (b) Any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other employees who have a significant role in the registrant’s internal control

over financial reporting.

Date: February 25, 2021

/s/ Daniel Burton
Daniel Burton
Chief Executive Officer
(Principal Executive Officer)

 
 
 
 
CERTIFICATION PURSUANT TO RULE 13a-14(a) OR 15d-14(a) OF
THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934,
AS ADOPTED PURSUANT TO SECTION 302 OF
THE SARBANES-OXLEY ACT OF 2002

Exhibit 31.2

I, Bryan Hunt, certify that:

1. I have reviewed this Annual Report on Form 10-K of Health Catalyst, Inc.;

2. Based on my knowledge, this report does not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact necessary to make the
statements made, in light of the circumstances under which such statements were made, not misleading with respect to the period covered by this report;

3. Based on my knowledge, the financial statements, and other financial information included in this report, fairly present in all material respects the
financial condition, results of operations and cash flows of the registrant as of, and for, the periods presented in this report;

4. The registrant’s other certifying officer and I are responsible for establishing and maintaining disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Exchange
Act Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e)) for the registrant and have:

(a) Designed such disclosure controls and procedures, or caused such disclosure controls and procedures to be designed under our supervision, to ensure
that material information relating to the registrant, including its consolidated subsidiaries, is made known to us by others within those entities,
particularly during the period in which this report is being prepared;

(b) Evaluated the effectiveness of the registrant’s disclosure controls and procedures and presented in this report our conclusions about the effectiveness
of the disclosure controls and procedures, as of the end of the period covered by this report based on such evaluation; and

(c) Disclosed in this report any change in the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting that occurred during the registrant’s most recent fiscal
quarter (the registrant’s fourth fiscal quarter in the case of an annual report) that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the
registrant’s internal control over financial reporting; and

5. The registrant’s other certifying officer and I have disclosed, based on our most recent evaluation of internal control over financial reporting, to the
registrant’s auditors and the audit committee of the registrant’s board of directors (or persons performing the equivalent functions):

(a) All significant deficiencies and material weaknesses in the design or operation of internal control over financial reporting which are reasonably
likely to adversely affect the registrant’s ability to record, process, summarize and report financial information; and

(b) Any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other employees who have a significant role in the registrant’s internal control over
financial reporting.

Date: February 25, 2021

/s/ Bryan Hunt
Bryan Hunt
Chief Financial Officer
(Principal Financial Officer)

 
 
 
 
CERTIFICATION PURSUANT TO
18 U.S.C. SECTION 1350,
AS ADOPTED PURSUANT TO
SECTION 906 OF THE SARBANES-OXLEY ACT OF 2002

Exhibit 32.1

In connection with the filing of the Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2020, as filed with the Securities and Exchange
Commission on the date hereof (the "Report") by Health Catalyst, Inc. (the "Company"), Daniel Burton, as the Chief Executive Officer of the Company,
and Bryan Hunt, as the Chief Financial Officer of the Company, each hereby certifies pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350, as adopted pursuant to Section
906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, that, to the best of his knowledge:

1

2

The Report fully complies with the requirements of Section 13(a) or Section 15(d) of the Exchange Act; and

The information contained in the Report fairly presents, in all material respects, the financial condition and results of
operations of the Company.

Date: February 25, 2021

/s/ Daniel Burton
Daniel Burton
Chief Executive Officer
(Principal Executive Officer)

/s/ Bryan Hunt
Bryan Hunt
Chief Financial Officer
(Principal Financial Officer)